Correction and strengthening of ``How large are the level sets of the Takagi function?'' (Q466844): Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 05:26, 9 July 2024
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English | Correction and strengthening of ``How large are the level sets of the Takagi function?'' |
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Correction and strengthening of ``How large are the level sets of the Takagi function?'' (English)
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31 October 2014
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Let \(T: [0,1]\to\mathbb{R}\) be the Takagi's continuous nowhere differentiable function: \[ T(x)=\sum_{n=0}^{\infty}\frac{1}{2^n}\phi(2^nx), \] where \(\phi(x)\) is the distance from \(x\) to the nearst integer. It is well-known that the range of \(T\) is equal to \([0,2/3]\). For \(y\in\mathbb{R}\) let \(L(y)=T^{-1}(y)=\{ x\in [0,1]: T(x)=y\}\). The author proves that the set \(S^{\mathrm{loc,uc}}_\infty\) of all \(y\in\mathbb{R}\) for which \(L(y)\) contains uncountably many distinct local level sets, is residual in the range of \(T\). This corrects an error and strengthens the main results from an earlier paper by the same author [Monatsh. Math. 167, No. 3--4, 311--331 (2012; Zbl 1256.26002)].
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Takagi's function
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nowhere-differentiable function
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level set
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local level set
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residual set
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perfect set
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