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arxiv: 2512.17606 · v2 · submitted 2025-12-19 · 🧮 math.MG

A characterization of the local structure of two-dimensional sets with positive reach

Pith reviewed 2026-05-16 20:47 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.MG
keywords positive reachtangent conelocal structureC^{1,1} surfacetwo-dimensional setsreach setsconvex cones
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The pith

Two-dimensional sets with positive reach have their local structure completely characterized by the geometry of their tangent cones.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

This paper provides a full description of how two-dimensional sets with positive reach appear near each of their points when embedded in higher-dimensional space. Positive reach sets are those for which there is a positive distance to which the set can be thickened without overlapping projections, a property that rules out sharp inward cusps. A reader might care because these sets model many objects in geometry, computer vision and partial differential equations where boundaries must remain well-behaved. The work also simplifies an earlier proof for sets of any dimension k and proves that the points with k-dimensional tangent cones lie on countably many C^{1,1} surfaces.

Core claim

The main result is a complete characterization of the local structure of two-dimensional sets with positive reach in R^d. At each point the tangent cone is shown to be one of a short list of convex cones compatible with the reach condition, and the set near the point is a graph over this cone in a controlled way.

What carries the argument

The tangent cone at a point of the set, which must be a convex cone whose geometry is constrained by the positive reach radius.

If this is right

  • The set of points where the tangent cone is k-dimensional is locally contained in a k-dimensional C^{1,1} surface.
  • Any k-dimensional set with positive reach can be covered by countably many k-dimensional C^{1,1} surfaces.
  • Compact two-dimensional sets with positive reach admit a global characterization as finite unions of such surfaces.
  • A more elementary proof is given for the local structure of k-dimensional positive-reach sets at points with k-dimensional tangent cones.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • This structure theorem may allow one to reduce many variational problems on positive-reach sets to problems on C^{1,1} manifolds with controlled singularities.
  • The result suggests that positive reach is a strong regularity condition that forces rectifiability with explicit singular sets.
  • Similar characterizations could be sought for sets with bounded curvature or other weaker regularity assumptions.

Load-bearing premise

The set is assumed to have positive reach, which forces the tangent cone at every point to be a convex cone without narrow inward angles.

What would settle it

Construct a two-dimensional set in R^3 that has positive reach but at some point its local structure is a cone with an angle incompatible with the listed possibilities, such as a very sharp wedge.

read the original abstract

The main result of the article is a complete characterization of the local structure of two-dimensional sets with positive reach in $R^d$. We also present a more elementary proof of a recent result of A. Lytchak which describes for $k\leq d$ the local structure of $k$-dimensional sets with positive reach $A$ in $R^d$ at points where the tangent cone of $A$ is $k$-dimensional. As an easy corollary of our and Lytchak's results we obtain a characterization of compact two-dimensional sets with positive reach in $R^d$. Our method also shows that, for any set $A\subset R^d$ with positive reach, the set of points at which the tangent cone of $A$ is $k$-dimensional is locally contained in a $k$-dimensional $C^{1,1}$ surface. As a consequence we obtain that if $1\leq k<d$, and $A$ is $k$-dimensional, it can be covered by countably many $k$-dimensional $C^{1,1}$ surfaces.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

0 major / 3 minor

Summary. The paper claims a complete characterization of the local structure of two-dimensional sets with positive reach in R^d. It also supplies an elementary re-proof of Lytchak's theorem on the local structure of k-dimensional positive-reach sets at points where the tangent cone is exactly k-dimensional, and derives as corollaries that compact two-dimensional positive-reach sets admit a countable C^{1,1} surface covering and that the k-dimensional tangent-cone locus of any positive-reach set is locally contained in a C^{1,1} k-surface.

Significance. If the characterization holds, the work supplies an explicit local model for the two-dimensional case that was previously unavailable, together with a simplified proof of Lytchak's result and immediate structural consequences for coverings by C^{1,1} surfaces. These outcomes strengthen the geometric theory of sets of positive reach without introducing free parameters or ad-hoc constructions, and the corollaries are directly falsifiable by counter-example.

minor comments (3)
  1. [§2] §2 (proof of Lytchak's result): the reduction to the case of a k-dimensional tangent cone is stated clearly, but the precise invocation of the reach function's upper semicontinuity could be referenced to a numbered lemma for easier verification.
  2. [Main theorem] The statement of the main characterization theorem (presumably Theorem 3.1 or 4.1) lists the possible local models; adding a short table or diagram summarizing the admissible tangent cones and normal cones would improve readability.
  3. [Corollary] Corollary on countable C^{1,1} coverings: the argument that the k-dimensional locus is locally contained in a C^{1,1} surface is direct, yet the transition from local to global countable covering would benefit from an explicit reference to a standard covering lemma.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

0 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their positive summary of the manuscript, for recognizing the value of the complete local characterization in the two-dimensional case, the elementary proof of Lytchak's theorem, and the corollaries on C^{1,1} coverings. We are pleased that the referee recommends acceptance.

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity in the derivation chain

full rationale

The paper presents a characterization of local structure for two-dimensional positive-reach sets derived directly from the definitions of reach, tangent cones, and normal cones, together with an elementary re-proof of Lytchak's result on k-dimensional tangent cones. No parameters are fitted, no quantities are defined in terms of the claimed outputs, and the central arguments do not reduce to self-citations or prior ansatzes by the same authors. The corollaries on C^{1,1} coverings follow immediately from the local classification without circular reduction.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 1 axioms · 0 invented entities

This is a pure mathematical characterization theorem. It relies on established definitions of positive reach and tangent cones from geometric measure theory without introducing fitted parameters or new postulated entities.

axioms (1)
  • standard math Standard definitions and basic properties of sets with positive reach and their tangent cones in Euclidean space
    The paper invokes these as background from geometric measure theory.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5487 in / 1137 out tokens · 30595 ms · 2026-05-16T20:47:50.594819+00:00 · methodology

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Reference graph

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