Banach fixed point theorem from the viewpoint of digital topology
From MaRDI portal
Publication:3457900
DOI10.22436/jnsa.009.03.19zbMath1330.54056OpenAlexW2782811136MaRDI QIDQ3457900
Publication date: 7 December 2015
Published in: Journal of Nonlinear Sciences and Applications (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: http://www.tjnsa.com/includes/files/articles/Vol9_Iss3_895--905_Banach_fixed_point_theorem_from_the.pdf
Banach contraction principleBanach fixed point theoremdigital topologydigital imagedigital continuitydigital contraction map
Computing methodologies for image processing (68U10) Fixed-point and coincidence theorems (topological aspects) (54H25) Special maps on metric spaces (54E40)
Related Items (18)
The product property of the almost fixed point property for digital spaces ⋮ Remarks on Fixed Point Assertions in Digital Topology, 3 ⋮ The fixed point property of an \(M\)-retract and its applications ⋮ Remarks on fixed point assertions in digital topology, 6 ⋮ Unnamed Item ⋮ Almost fixed point property for digital spaces associated with Marcus-Wyse topological spaces ⋮ Cold and Freezing Sets in the Digital Plane ⋮ Estimation of the complexity of a digital image from the viewpoint of fixed point theory ⋮ Remarks on Fixed Point Assertions in Digital Topology, 4 ⋮ Fuzzy triple controlled metric spaces and related fixed point results ⋮ Commuting and compatible mappings in digital metric spaces ⋮ Digital Space-Type Fixed Point Theory and Its Applications ⋮ Algebraic invariants in abstract cellular complex ⋮ Contractibility and fixed point property: the case of Khalimsky topological spaces ⋮ Remarks on Fixed Point Assertions in Digital Topology ⋮ Remarks on Fixed Point Assertions in Digital Topology, 2 ⋮ On pentagonal controlled fuzzy metric spaces with an application to dynamic market equilibrium ⋮ The fixed point property of the smallest open neighborhood of the n-dimensional Khalimsky topological space
This page was built for publication: Banach fixed point theorem from the viewpoint of digital topology