Bounds on arithmetic projections, and applications to the Kakeya conjecture (Q1574747): Difference between revisions

From MaRDI portal
Import240304020342 (talk | contribs)
Set profile property.
Created claim: Wikidata QID (P12): Q123345857, #quickstatements; #temporary_batch_1712286835472
Property / Wikidata QID
 
Property / Wikidata QID: Q123345857 / rank
 
Normal rank

Revision as of 04:49, 5 April 2024

scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Bounds on arithmetic projections, and applications to the Kakeya conjecture
scientific article

    Statements

    Bounds on arithmetic projections, and applications to the Kakeya conjecture (English)
    0 references
    13 August 2000
    0 references
    Let \(A, B, C\) be sets of integers of cardinality at most \(N\), and let \(G\) be a subset of \(A\times B\) such that the differences \(\{ a-b: (a,b) \in G \}\) are all distinct, and the sums \(\{ a+b: (a,b) \in G \}\) all lie in \(C\). The cardinality of \(G\) is trivially bounded by \(N^2\), however this was improved by Gowers to \(N^{2-\varepsilon}\) for some \(\varepsilon > 0\). Bourgain obtained the quantitative value of \(\varepsilon = 1/13\); this is improved to \(1/6\) in this paper. If one makes the additional assumption that the weighted sums \(\{ a+2b: (a,b) \in G \}\) lie in another set \(D\) of cardinality at most \(N\), then one can improve this further to \(1/4\). As an application the authors show that Besicovitch sets (sets in \(R^n\) which contain a line segment in every dimension) have Minkowski dimension at least \((4n+3)/7\) and Hausdorff dimension at least \((6n+5)/11\).
    0 references
    Besicovitch sets
    0 references
    Kakeya conjecture
    0 references
    Balog-Szemeredi theorem
    0 references
    Minkowski dimension
    0 references
    Hausdorff dimension
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references

    Identifiers