Differentiability of a two-parameter family of self-affine functions
Abstract
This paper highlights an unexpected connection between expansions of real numbers to noninteger bases (so-called β-expansions) and the infinite derivatives of a class of self-affine functions. Precisely, we extend Okamoto's function (itself a generalization of the well-known functions of Perkins and Katsuura) to a two-parameter family \FN,a: N∈N, a∈(0,1)\. We first show that for each x, FN,a'(x) is either 0, ∞, or undefined. We then extend Okamoto's theorem by proving that for each N, depending on the value of a relative to a pair of thresholds, the set \x: FN,a'(x)=0\ is either empty, uncountable but Lebesgue null, or of full Lebesgue measure. We compute its Hausdorff dimension in the second case. The second result is a characterization of the set D∞(a):=\x:FN,a'(x)=∞\, which enables us to closely relate this set to the set of points which have a unique expansion in the (typically noninteger) base β=1/a. Recent advances in the theory of β-expansions are then used to determine the cardinality and Hausdorff dimension of D∞(a), which depends qualitatively on the value of a relative to a second pair of thresholds.
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