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Vertical curves and vertical fibers in the Heisenberg group

Gioacchino Antonelli, Robert Young

Abstract

Let $\mathbb H$ denote the three-dimensional Heisenberg group. In this paper, we study vertical curves in $\mathbb H$ and fibers of maps $\mathbb H \to \mathbb R^2$ from a metric perspective. We say that a set in $\mathbb H$ is a vertical curve if it satisfies a cone condition with respect to a homogeneous cone with axis $\langle Z \rangle$, the center of $\mathbb H$. This is analogous to the cone condition used to define intrinsic Lipschitz graphs. In the first part of the paper, we prove that connected vertical curves are locally biHölder equivalent to intervals. We also show that the class of vertical curves coincides with the class of intersections of intrinsic Lipschitz graphs satisfying a transversality condition. Unlike intrinsic Lipschitz graphs, the Hausdorff dimension of a vertical curve can vary; we construct vertical curves with Hausdorff dimension either strictly larger or strictly smaller than 2. Consequently, there are intersections of intrinsic Lipschitz graphs with Hausdorff dimension either strictly larger or strictly smaller than 2. In the second part of the paper, we consider smooth functions $β$ from the unit ball $B$ in $\mathbb H$ to $\mathbb R^2$. We show that, in contrast to the situation in Euclidean space, there are maps such that $β$ is arbitrarily close to the projection $π$ from $\mathbb H$ to the horizontal plane, but the average $\mathcal{H}^2$ measure of a fiber of $β$ in $B$ is arbitrarily small.

Vertical curves and vertical fibers in the Heisenberg group

Abstract

Let denote the three-dimensional Heisenberg group. In this paper, we study vertical curves in and fibers of maps from a metric perspective. We say that a set in is a vertical curve if it satisfies a cone condition with respect to a homogeneous cone with axis , the center of . This is analogous to the cone condition used to define intrinsic Lipschitz graphs. In the first part of the paper, we prove that connected vertical curves are locally biHölder equivalent to intervals. We also show that the class of vertical curves coincides with the class of intersections of intrinsic Lipschitz graphs satisfying a transversality condition. Unlike intrinsic Lipschitz graphs, the Hausdorff dimension of a vertical curve can vary; we construct vertical curves with Hausdorff dimension either strictly larger or strictly smaller than 2. Consequently, there are intersections of intrinsic Lipschitz graphs with Hausdorff dimension either strictly larger or strictly smaller than 2. In the second part of the paper, we consider smooth functions from the unit ball in to . We show that, in contrast to the situation in Euclidean space, there are maps such that is arbitrarily close to the projection from to the horizontal plane, but the average measure of a fiber of in is arbitrarily small.

Paper Structure

This paper contains 9 sections, 25 theorems, 137 equations, 2 figures.

Key Result

Proposition 1.1

If $E$ is a connected $\lambda$-vertical curve, then there are an interval $I\subset \mathbb{R}$ and a map $\gamma\colon I\to \mathbb{H}$ such that $\gamma$ sends $I$ homeomorphically to $E$ and where $\mathop{\mathrm{VCone}}\nolimits^+_\lambda := \mathop{\mathrm{VCone}}\nolimits_\lambda\cap \{z\geq 0\}$. If $E$ is compact, then we can take $\gamma$ to be a bi-Hölder map from $[0,1]$ to $E$. That

Figures (2)

  • Figure 1: An example of the curves constructed in Theorem \ref{['thm:HausDim2']}
  • Figure 2: The intersection of $W_1$ and $W_2$ with the horizontal circle $S^1$. The shaded neighborhoods of $W_1$ and $W_2$ represent $\mathop{\mathrm{Cone}}\nolimits_{W_1,L}$ and $\mathop{\mathrm{Cone}}\nolimits_{W_2,L}$.

Theorems & Definitions (42)

  • Proposition 1.1
  • Lemma 1.2
  • Theorem 1.3
  • Theorem 1.4
  • Corollary 1.5
  • Theorem 1.6
  • Lemma 3.1
  • Proposition 3.2
  • proof : Proof of Lemma \ref{['lem:Properties']}
  • Lemma 3.3
  • ...and 32 more