Ultrametric space
In mathematics, an ultrametric space is a special kind of metric space in which the triangle inequality is replaced with . Sometimes the associated metric is also called a non-Archimedean metric or super-metric. Although some of the theorems for ultrametric spaces may seem strange at a first glance, they appear naturally in many applications.
Formal definition
Formally, an ultrametric space is a set of points with an associated distance function (also called a metric)
(where is the set of real numbers), such that for all , one has:
- iff
- (symmetry)
- (strong triangle or ultrametric inequality).
In the case when is a group and is generated by a length function (so that ), the last property can be made stronger using the Krull sharpening[1] to:
- with equality if .
We want to prove that if , then the equality occurs if . Without loss of generality, let us assume that . This implies that . But we can also compute . Now, the value of cannot be , for if that is the case, we have contrary to the initial assumption. Thus, , and . Using the initial inequality, we have and therefore .
Properties
From the above definition, one can conclude several typical properties of ultrametrics. For example, in an ultrametric space, for all and :
- Every triangle is an acute isosceles or equilateral, i.e. or or .
In the following, the concept and notation of an (open) ball is the same as in the article about metric spaces, i.e.
- .
- Every point inside a ball is its center, i.e. if then .
- Intersecting balls are contained in each other, i.e. if is non-empty then either or .
- All balls are both open and closed sets in the induced topology. That is, open balls are also closed, and closed balls (replace with ) are also open.
- The set of all open balls with radius r and center in a closed ball of radius forms a partition of the latter, and the mutual distance of two distinct open balls is again equal to .
Proving these statements is an instructive exercise.[2] All directly derive from the ultrametric triangle inequality. Note that, by the second statement, a ball may have several center points that have non-zero distance. The intuition behind such seemingly strange effects is that, due to the strong triangle inequality, distances in ultrametrics do not add up.
Examples
- The discrete metric is an ultrametric.
- The p-adic numbers form a complete ultrametric space.
- Consider the set of words of arbitrary length (finite or infinite) over some alphabet Σ. Define the distance between two different words to be 2−n, where n is the first place at which the words differ. The resulting metric is an ultrametric.
- The set of words with glued ends of the length n over some alphabet Σ is an ultrametric space with respect to the p-close distance. Two words x and y are p-close if any substring of p (p< n) consecutive letters appears the same number of times (might be also zero) both in x and y.[3]
- If r=(rn) is a sequence of real numbers decreasing to zero, then |x|r := lim supn→∞ |xn|rn induces an ultrametric on the space of all complex sequences for which it is finite. (Note that this is not a seminorm since it lacks homogeneity. — If the rn are allowed to be zero, one should use here the rather unusual convention that 00=0.)
- If G is an edge-weighted undirected graph, all edge weights are positive, and d(u,v) is the weight of the minimax path between u and v (that is, the largest weight of an edge, on a path chosen to minimize this largest weight), then the vertices of the graph, with distance measured by d, form an ultrametric space, and all finite ultrametric spaces may be represented in this way.[4]
Applications
- A contraction mapping may then be thought of as a way of approximating the final result of a computation (which can be guaranteed to exist by the Banach fixed point theorem). Similar ideas can be found in domain theory. P-adic analysis makes heavy use of the ultrametric nature of the p-adic metric.
- In solid-state physics, applications are also known, namely in the treatment of spin glasses by the replica-theory of Giorgio Parisi and coworkers,[5] and also in the theory of aperiodic solids.[6]
- In taxonomy and phylogenetic tree construction, ultrametric distances are also utilized by the UPGMA and WPGMA methods.[7] These algorithms require a constant-rate assumption and produce trees in which the distances from the root to every branch tip are equal. When DNA, RNA and protein data are analyzed, the ultrametricity assumption is called the molecular clock.
References
- ↑ Planet Math: Ultrametric Triangle Inequality
- ↑ Stack Exchange: Ultrametric Triangle Inequality
- ↑ Osipov, Gutkin (2013), "Clustering of periodic orbits in chaotic systems", Nonlinearity (26): 177–200, doi:10.1088/0951-7715/26/1/177.
- ↑ Leclerc, Bruno (1981), "Description combinatoire des ultramétriques", Centre de Mathématique Sociale. École Pratique des Hautes Études. Mathématiques et Sciences Humaines (in French) (73): 5–37, 127, MR 623034.
- ↑ Mezard, M; Parisi, G; and Virasoro, M: SPIN GLASS THEORY AND BEYOND, World Scientific, 1986. ISBN 978-9971-5-0116-7
- ↑ Rammal, R.; Toulouse, G.; Virasoro, M. (1986). "Ultrametricity for physicists". Reviews of Modern Physics 58 (3): 765–788. doi:10.1103/RevModPhys.58.765. Retrieved 20 June 2011.
- ↑ Legendre, P. and Legendre, L. 1998. Numerical Ecology. Second English Edition. Developments in Environmental Modelling 20. Elsevier, Amsterdam.
Further reading
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Non-Archimedean geometry. |
- Kaplansky, I. (1977), Set Theory and Metric Spaces, AMS Chelsea Publishing, ISBN 0-8218-2694-8.