Infinite curve with two endpoints?

In summary, the conversation discusses the possibility of a non-intersecting smooth or Peano type curve that can pass through every point on a finite surface area, including the endpoints. It is suggested that fractals and toroidal curves may fulfill this condition. However, it is also mentioned that a space-filling curve cannot be 1-1 and any subset of the plane with finite length cannot have positive area. The conversation also explores the idea of a smooth curve with infinite length and whether it can pave a plane.
  • #1
SW VandeCarr
2,199
81
I'm wondering if such a thing can exist. It seems a non intersecting smooth or Peano type curve can be defined over a finite surface area that passes once through (or terminates at) every point on the surface, including its two end points.

EDIT: I don't think this is the same question as the number of points on a line segment. I asking about a curve of infinite length.
 
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  • #2
If you mean a curve with infinite length, yes. Consider fractals.
 
  • #3
Eynstone said:
If you mean a curve with infinite length, yes. Consider fractals.

Yes, such as the Peano curve I mentioned. Is it true for any smooth non intersecting curve as well? I'm thinking that an everywhere smooth non intersecting curve cannot completely pave a plane, but could still be infinite with two endpoints as weird as that sounds.

EDIT: I partially rescind that. A smooth non intersecting curve can pave a plane with smooth boundaries, but not other kinds of boundaries which contain singular points. I'm thinking an infinite non intersecting smooth curve must pass through (or terminate at) every point in a plane once and only once.
 
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  • #4
SW VandeCarr said:
Yes, such as the Peano curve I mentioned. Is it true for any smooth non intersecting curve as well? I'm thinking that an everywhere smooth non intersecting curve cannot completely pave a plane, but could still be infinite with two endpoints as weird as that sounds.

EDIT: I partially rescind that. A smooth non intersecting curve can pave a plane with smooth boundaries, but not other kinds of boundaries which contain singular points. I'm thinking an infinite non intersecting smooth curve must pass through (or terminate at) every point in a plane once and only once.

I wonder if we could keep the Peano curve smooth throughout its construction ; so that the sequence of smooth curves is smooth in the limit. We have a curve which is smooth almost everywhere already.
 
  • #5
Eynstone said:
I wonder if we could keep the Peano curve smooth throughout its construction ; so that the sequence of smooth curves is smooth in the limit. We have a curve which is smooth almost everywhere already.

I don't think so, but I'm not that deep into topology. Doesn't the Peano curve have singular points by definition such that line segments are not eliminated at the limit? That is, the Peano curve cannot be smoothed?
 
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  • #6
Suppose that we 'pare off' the corners at each stage of the construction of the Peano curve , so that the resulting curve is sufficiently smooth. The sequence of such curves ought to converge to a differentiable,space-filling function (under some restrictions, of course). Its image won't be a square, but a compact subset of the square.
 
  • #7
I'm not sure what a Peano curve is, but I know a simple case where you can have this to be true. If you take a toroidal curve with an irrational rotational transform (the ratio of poloidal period covered in one full toroidal period), then as the number of transits goes to infinity, this curve will fill an entire toroidal surface, and it will never intersect its tail.
 
  • #8
mordechai9 said:
I'm not sure what a Peano curve is, but I know a simple case where you can have this to be true. If you take a toroidal curve with an irrational rotational transform (the ratio of poloidal period covered in one full toroidal period), then as the number of transits goes to infinity, this curve will fill an entire toroidal surface, and it will never intersect its tail.

This seems wrong. A line on the torus can only intersect a circle in countably many points.

If the torus is viewed as a square with opposite edges identified then a line drawn at an irrational angle to its lower edge can only intersect that edge in countably many points. Otherwise the line would be uncountably long i.e. could be divided into uncountably many disjoint intervals of equal length.
 
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  • #9
SW VandeCarr said:
Yes, such as the Peano curve I mentioned. Is it true for any smooth non intersecting curve as well? I'm thinking that an everywhere smooth non intersecting curve cannot completely pave a plane, but could still be infinite with two endpoints as weird as that sounds.

EDIT: I partially rescind that. A smooth non intersecting curve can pave a plane with smooth boundaries, but not other kinds of boundaries which contain singular points. I'm thinking an infinite non intersecting smooth curve must pass through (or terminate at) every point in a plane once and only once.

The sample paths of a continuous Brownian motion are almost surely continuous and have infinite variation on any interval.
 
  • #10
SW VandeCarr said:
I'm wondering if such a thing can exist. It seems a non intersecting smooth or Peano type curve can be defined over a finite surface area that passes once through (or terminates at) every point on the surface, including its two end points.

EDIT: I don't think this is the same question as the number of points on a line segment. I asking about a curve of infinite length.

I do not think a space filling curve can be 1 to 1. Not sure of the proof.
 
  • #11
A 1-1 space-filling curve would be a continuous bijection between compact and Hausdorff...
 
  • #12
Eynstone said:
Suppose that we 'pare off' the corners at each stage of the construction of the Peano curve , so that the resulting curve is sufficiently smooth. The sequence of such curves ought to converge to a differentiable,space-filling function (under some restrictions, of course). Its image won't be a square, but a compact subset of the square.

A smooth curve has finite length -- the integrand defining its length is a continuous function of the parameter, and thus bounded.

Any subset of the plane of finite length cannot have positive area; its image cannot contain any non-empty open set.
 
  • #13
Yes, what I meant is that if you had a continuous bijection into the image, you would get an embedding which would send open sets in R into relatively-open subsets of the square, violating invariance of domain.
 
  • #14
Bacle said:
Yes, what I meant is that if you had a continuous bijection into the image, you would get an embedding which would send open sets in R into relatively-open subsets of the square, violating invariance of domain.

I don't see why this is true. Can you explain?
 
  • #15
Well, the general result is that a continuous bijection between a compact space and a Hausdorff space is a homeomorphism. Then, if the unit interval I could be mapped bijectively (and, of course, continuously), into the unit square, that would mean that there was an embedding of I into the unit square, so that open subsets of the unit square are mapped to relatively open subsets of the unit square.
 
  • #16
Bacle said:
Well, the general result is that a continuous bijection between a compact space and a Hausdorff space is a homeomorphism.
This is the key part of your argument, I think. You're being somewhat misleading by emphasizing every detail except this one.
 
  • #17
How so? I don't get your point; this is a standard result from point set topology.

The idea is that a closed subset of a compact space is Hausdorff , and that a continuous

function sends compact to compact. Then a compact subset of Hausdorff is closed, so that the

inverse function takes closed sets to closed sets , and so the function is continuous with a continuous inverse.
 
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  • #18
Bacle said:
Well, the general result is that a continuous bijection between a compact space and a Hausdorff space is a homeomorphism. Then, if the unit interval I could be mapped bijectively (and, of course, continuously), into the unit square, that would mean that there was an embedding of I into the unit square, so that open subsets of the unit square are mapped to relatively open subsets of the unit square.

Right if the mapping is of a closed interval. If the interval is open this doesn't work.
 
  • #19
Right, but isn't the Peano curve an image of the closed interval?
 
  • #20
I think we can discount the case of f being smooth by using Sard's theorem:

The Jacobian J of a map from R1 into R2 is a 1x2-matrix, so that every single value in the domain is a critical value of J. Then the set f(I) (whether I is--I am?-- open or closed) has measure zero in R2. Tho I don't know if asking for smoothness is overkill.
 

Related to Infinite curve with two endpoints?

1. What is an infinite curve with two endpoints?

An infinite curve with two endpoints is a mathematical concept that refers to a curve that extends infinitely in both directions but still has two distinct endpoints. This means that the curve never ends, but it also has a defined beginning and end point.

2. How is an infinite curve with two endpoints different from a regular curve?

An infinite curve with two endpoints differs from a regular curve in that it extends infinitely in both directions, while a regular curve has a finite length. Additionally, a regular curve may have more than two endpoints or no endpoints at all.

3. Can an infinite curve with two endpoints intersect with itself?

No, an infinite curve with two endpoints cannot intersect with itself. Since it extends infinitely in both directions, it never loops back on itself or crosses over its own path.

4. What are some real-world examples of an infinite curve with two endpoints?

Some real-world examples of an infinite curve with two endpoints include a straight road that extends infinitely in both directions, the horizon line on a flat surface, and the edges of a mirror.

5. How is an infinite curve with two endpoints used in science?

An infinite curve with two endpoints is used in many scientific fields, such as physics, engineering, and mathematics. It is often used to model and analyze real-world phenomena, such as the motion of objects, the behavior of waves, and the shape of natural curves and surfaces.

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