Abstract
AbstractA thin set is defined to be an uncountable dense zero-dimensional subset of measure zero and Hausdorff measure zero of an Euclidean space. A fat set is defined to be an uncountable dense path-connected subset of an Euclidean space which has full measure, that is, its complement has measure zero. While there are well-known pathological maps of a set of measure zero, such as the Cantor set, onto an interval, we show that the standard addition on
$\mathbb {R}$
maps a thin set onto a fat set; in fact the fat set is all of
$\mathbb {R}$
. Our argument depends on the theorem of Paul Erdős that every real number is a sum of two Liouville numbers. Our thin set is the set
$\mathcal {L}^{2}$
, where
$\mathcal {L}$
is the set of all Liouville numbers, and the fat set is
$\mathbb {R}$
itself. Finally, it is shown that
$\mathcal {L}$
and
$\mathcal {L}^{2}$
are both homeomorphic to
$\mathbb {P}$
, the space of all irrational numbers.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Cited by
3 articles.
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1. ERDŐS PROPERTIES OF SUBSETS OF THE MAHLER SETS;Bulletin of the Australian Mathematical Society;2023-02-27
2. SIN, COS, EXP AND LOG OF LIOUVILLE NUMBERS;Bulletin of the Australian Mathematical Society;2022-12-23
3. ERDŐS–LIOUVILLE SETS;Bulletin of the Australian Mathematical Society;2022-10-03