Revisiting the multifractal analysis of measures
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1941176
DOI10.4171/RMI/721zbMath1273.28008arXiv1005.4866OpenAlexW2093312940MaRDI QIDQ1941176
Fathi Ben Nasr, Jacques Peyrière
Publication date: 11 March 2013
Published in: Revista Matemática Iberoamericana (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1005.4866
Contents, measures, outer measures, capacities (28A12) Metric theory of other algorithms and expansions; measure and Hausdorff dimension (11K55) Fractals (28A80) Hausdorff and packing measures (28A78)
Related Items (13)
The mutual singularity of multifractal measures for some non-regular Moran fractals ⋮ A multifractal formalism for Hewitt-Stromberg measures ⋮ Multifractal analysis of some inhomogeneous multinomial measures with distinct analytic Olsen's \(b\) and \(B\) functions ⋮ On the mutual singularity of Hewitt-Stromberg measures for which the multifractal functions do not necessarily coincide ⋮ On the multifractal measures: proportionality and dimensions of Moran sets ⋮ Multifractal dimensions for projections of measures ⋮ Multifractal analysis of Bernoulli measures on a class of homogeneous Cantor sets ⋮ Some new characterizations of Olsen's multifractal functions ⋮ Multifractal formalism of an inhomogeneous multinomial measure with various parameters ⋮ A review on multifractal analysis of Hewitt-Stromberg measures ⋮ On the multifractal analysis of measures in a probability space ⋮ Multifractal spectra of Moran measures without local dimension ⋮ A relative vectorial multifractal formalism
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- The infinite number of generalized dimensions of fractals and strange attractors
- The validity of the multifractal formalism: Results and examples
- A multifractal formalism
- Fractal measures and their singularities: The characterization of strange sets
- Packing regularity of sets in n-space
- Two definitions of fractional dimension
This page was built for publication: Revisiting the multifractal analysis of measures