In mathematics, Hausdorff measure is a generalization of the traditional notions of area and volume to non-integer dimensions, specifically fractals and their Hausdorff dimensions. It is a type of outer measure, named for Felix Hausdorff, that assigns a number in [0,∞] to each set in
\Rn
The zero-dimensional Hausdorff measure is the number of points in the set (if the set is finite) or ∞ if the set is infinite. Likewise, the one-dimensional Hausdorff measure of a simple curve in
\Rn
\R2
Let
(X,\rho)
U\subsetX
\operatorname{diam}U
\operatorname{diam}U:=\sup\{\rho(x,y):x,y\inU\}, \operatorname{diam}\emptyset:=0.
Let
S
X,
\delta>0
d | |
H | |
\delta(S)=inf\left |
infty | |
\{\sum | |
i=1 |
(\operatorname{diam}
d: | |
U | |
i) |
infty | |
cup | |
i=1 |
Ui\supseteqS,\operatorname{diam}Ui<\delta\right\},
where the infimum is over all countable covers of
S
Ui\subsetX
\operatorname{diam}Ui<\delta
Note that
d | |
H | |
\delta(S) |
\delta
\delta
\lim\delta\to
d | |
H | |
\delta(S) |
d(S):=\sup | |
H | |
\delta>0 |
d | |
H | |
\delta(S)=\lim |
\delta\to
d | |
H | |
\delta(S). |
It can be seen that
Hd(S)
d
S
X
Hd
In the above definition the sets in the covering are arbitrary. However, we can require the covering sets to be open or closed, or in normed spaces even convex, that will yield the same
d | |
H | |
\delta(S) |
\Rn
Note that if d is a positive integer, the d-dimensional Hausdorff measure of
\Rd
λd
λd(E)=2-d\alphadHd(E),
where αd is the volume of the unit d-ball; it can be expressed using Euler's gamma function
\alphad=
| = | ||||
|
\pid/2 | ||||
|
.
This is
λd(E)=\betadHd(E)
\betad
Remark. Some authors adopt a definition of Hausdorff measure slightly different from the one chosen here, the difference being that the value
Hd(E)
\betad=2-d\alphad
See main article: Hausdorff dimension.
It turns out that
Hd(S)
d
\dimHaus(S)=inf\{d\ge0:Hd(S)=0\}=\sup\{d\ge0:Hd(S)=infty\},
inf\emptyset=+infty
\sup\emptyset=0
Note that it is not guaranteed that the Hausdorff measure must be finite and nonzero for some d, and indeed the measure at the Hausdorff dimension may still be zero; in this case, the Hausdorff dimension still acts as a change point between measures of zero and infinity.
In geometric measure theory and related fields, the Minkowski content is often used to measure the size of a subset of a metric measure space. For suitable domains in Euclidean space, the two notions of size coincide, up to overall normalizations depending on conventions. More precisely, a subset of
\Rn
m
\Rm
m<n
m
m
\Rn
2-m\alpham
m
In fractal geometry, some fractals with Hausdorff dimension
d
d
In the definition of the measure
d | |
(\operatorname{diam}U | |
i) |
\phi(Ui),
\phi
\phi(\emptyset)=0.
This is the Hausdorff measure of
S
\phi,
\phi
d
S
Hd(S)=0,
H\phi(S)\in(0,infty)
\phi.
\phi(t)=t2loglog
1 | |
t |
or \phi(t)=
| |||||
t | logloglog |
1 | |
t |
.
The former gives almost surely positive and
\sigma
\Rn
n>2
n=2