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arxiv: 1309.3759 · v5 · pith:QL427CXRnew · submitted 2013-09-15 · 🧮 math.DS · math.MG

On the dimension of the graph of the classical Weierstrass function

classification 🧮 math.DS math.MG
keywords lambdadimensionfunctiongraphequaleveryhausdorffinfty
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This paper examines dimension of the graph of the famous Weierstrass non-differentiable function \[ W_{\lambda, b} (x) = \sum_{n=0}^{\infty}\lambda^n\cos(2\pi b^n x) \] for an integer $b \ge 2$ and $1/b < \lambda < 1$. We prove that for every $b$ there exists (explicitly given) $\lambda_b \in (1/b, 1)$ such that the Hausdorff dimension of the graph of $W_{\lambda, b}$ is equal to $D = 2+\frac{\log\lambda}{\log b}$ for every $\lambda\in(\lambda_b,1)$. We also show that the dimension is equal to $D$ for almost every $\lambda$ on some larger interval. This partially solves a well-known thirty-year-old conjecture. Furthermore, we prove that the Hausdorff dimension of the graph of the function \[ f (x) = \sum_{n=0}^{\infty}\lambda^n\phi(b^n x) \] for an integer $b \ge 2$ and $1/b < \lambda < 1$ is equal to $D$ for a typical $\mathbb Z$-periodic $C^3$ function $\phi$.

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