The derivative of Minkowski's \(?(x)\) function (Q5927556): Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 15:47, 3 June 2024

scientific article; zbMATH DE number 1579938
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English
The derivative of Minkowski's \(?(x)\) function
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 1579938

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    The derivative of Minkowski's \(?(x)\) function (English)
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    23 January 2002
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    The Minkowski function \(?(x): [0,1]\to [0,1]\) is strictly increasing, continuous, and maps the rational numbers onto the dyadic rationals. \textit{R. Salem} has proved in 1943 [Trans. Am. Math. Soc. 53, 427--439 (1943; Zbl 0060.13709)] that if \(x\in[0,1]\) has a continued fraction expansion with unbounded partial quotients and if \(?'(x)\) exists and is finite, then \(?'(x)=0\). This shows that \(?(x)\) is a singular function. In the present paper, the authors improve this long-standing result significantly by showing that existence of \(?'(x)\) in \(\mathbb R\) implies \(?'(x)=0\) for any \(x\in[0,1]\). They also give explicit conditions (some in terms of the continued fraction expansion of \(x\) and some in terms of the alternated dyadic expansion of \(?(x)\)) to determine whether \(?'(x)\) is 0 or infinite (if it exists in a wide sense).
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    Minkowski's question mark function
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    number systems
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    derivative
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    singular function
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