On the Magnitude Function of Domains in Euclidean Space, III: Questions and Examples from a Geometric Analyst’s Perspective (a)
Posted by Simon Willerton
guest post by Heiko Gimperlein and Magnus Goffeng
In this third in a series of blog posts on the magnitude function of Euclidean domains, we shall state from a more general perspective and discuss some new problems that we think might lead to a better understanding of magnitude. The starting point for these problems is in the analogy that our work draws between magnitudes and geometric analysis, an analogy we briefly explained in our first and second blogposts.
While working on magnitudes several questions arose that we have not been able to answer (yet). As they might lead to interesting connections between magnitudes and other fields of mathematics, we hope that they could be of interest to the readers of this blog. The questions come in three different flavors: topological continuity properties, geometric content and (particularly non-asymptotic) analytic results. We list some prototypical problems:
- Topological: In what sense (i.e. in which topology) is the magnitude function continuous in the Euclidean domain?
- Geometric: Can one “magnitude the shape of a drum”?
- Analytic: Is convexity detected by the poles of the magnitude function?
Below you find out more about topological problems, examples and counterexamples. A forthcoming post looks into the geometry and analysis of magnitude.
The magnitude is at first defined as a metric invariant. However, for geometric situations there are geometric tools. The Barceló-Carbery boundary value problem discussed in our previous two posts is one such tool, which allow us to apply the heavy toolbox of geometric analysis (and by extension: complex analysis) to study the magnitude function of domains in . The interplay between the analysis of boundary value problems and the topological and geometric invariants coming out of magnitude relates to classical ideas in geometric analysis and Atiyah-Singer index theorems. The problems we pose are influenced by Leinster-Willerton’s convex magnitude conjecture, but draw heavily on the analogy to geometric analysis.
Some topological problems
A key open question about the magnitude function is its dependence on the domain: In which topologies is continuous?
Here is a negative result, motivated by a question of Richard Hepworth. For consider So, for , we have the unit sphere and for we have the ball of radius . The family is continuous in the Hausdorff distance. One can compute that
Those who read the first blog post in our series may recognize the expression for , and the computations for are more or less the same (after changing coordinates from to ). The computation for the unit sphere, , goes back to Willerton. Note that
In the limit , one observes continuity as might be expected in analogy with a result by Leinster-Meckes for convex domains. Note that the term is the Euler characteristic , even when the topology changes. For there is a jump of dimension, and it is no surprise that the pointwise values also have a jump. So the magnitude function is not continuous with respect to the Hausdorff distance, but the asymptotics is the same as !
While we were preparing this blog post, Simon Willerton informed us that he had independently carried out the same computation with an alternative method and had come to the same conclusion about the discontinuity as .
The magnitude can be calculated from the solution of a differential equation, and for elliptic boundary problems with a second-order operator notions like Mosco and convergence have been studied. This may be of interest for general domains, however, as pointed out to us by Richard Hepworth, continuity for very special families of domains may be of most interest for applications. Nina Otter’s work on the relation between magnitude and persistent homology motivates the question:
Problem A. Let and for set , the union of -balls around these points. Is continuous?
From Simon Willerton’s formulas for the ball, the function is even real analytic for and odd. Our own work similarly shows real analyticity in the boring case of very small > , any , as long as the balls don’t intersect.
The original magnitude conjecture of Leinster-Willerton contained several far-reaching statements for the magnitude function of a (poly-)convex compact subset of Euclidean space, and one may hope for better continuity properties in this setting. An important general result of Leinster-Meckes says that the magnitude depends continuously on compact convex domains . So when restricting to convex compact domains, and considering the pointwise values of the magnitude function, we do have a continuous dependence on the set .
If the magnitude function admits an asymptotic expansion, , one may interpret the Leinster-Willerton conjecture as a statement about the coefficients , . Our methods prove the existence of this expansion for domains with smooth boundaries when is odd. Let’s denote the space of (possibly non-smooth) compact convex subsets of by . We let denote the subset of compact convex domains and the subset of compact convex domains with smooth boundary. The space is a compact Hausdorff space in the topology defined from the Hausdorff metric, and all the inclusions
are dense.
Problem B. For which values of does the coefficients in the asymptotic expansion depend continuously on in the Hausdorff metric?
Recall that we only have results for odd, so we restrict to this case. We note that if depends continuously on we can extend by continuity to . Additionally, if this holds for , a continuity argument shows the asymptotic inclusion/exclusion principle:
for with convex. In particular, is a Hausdorff-continuous function which is rotation-invariant and satisfies inclusion/exclusion. By Hadwiger’s theorem is then given by intrinsic volumes, and by the scaling property there are constants , such that
As such, Problem B is closely related to the Leinster-Willerton conjecture and asks for which :s is proportional to an intrinsic volume?
For , depends continuously on because according to our preprint is proportional to in this range of ’s. Computations of Barceló-Carbery, and later generalizations of Willerton, show that in the case of the unit ball in , for most (or all?) . For these Problem B therefore has a negative solution.
For , Problem B fails due to unpublished computations of Goffeng showing that is proportional to , the integral of the square of the mean curvature. is neither an intrinsic volume nor continuous in the Hausdorff metric. While it coincides with the Euler characteristic in the special case of the Euclidean ball in dimension , this is not true for general convex domains .
The case is of particular interest as it would relate the asymptotic expansion of the magnitude to the Euler characteristic . Still, in recent unpublished work, we find that for a closed Riemannian surface with a metric defined from the geodesic distance, the following asymptotics holds: The asymptotics fits with calculations of Willerton for homogeneous surfaces.
For the family of spaces exhibited above, the coefficient is for and . So Problem B could not have a positive solution for for all domains.
Problem C. For which ’s does it hold that the magnitude function “depends asymptotically continuously” on the domain in the Hausdorff metric up to order ?
Let us make this statement precise. For which ’s does it hold that for all and there are such that for within Hausdorff distance from ?
If Problem C has a positive solution for some and Problem B has a positive solution for , from a density argument and continuity we could deduce that for any there is an asymptotic expansion as . Again by density, we would have an asymptotic inclusion/exclusion principle for with convex. The results of Barceló-Carbery shows that so Problem C has a positive solution at least for . Since does not depend continuously on , it is only interesting to consider .
Re: On the Magnitude Function of Domains in Euclidean Space, III: Questions and Examples from a Geometric Analyst’s Perspective
Thanks for this post! There are some very thought-provoking results here.
One small comment:
This is a special case of Theorem 4.15 of the survey paper by Mark Meckes and me. And it’s true, both our names are on the paper. But it’s certainly Mark’s result, not mine.