pith. sign in

arxiv: 1109.4933 · v1 · pith:4CX43T2Fnew · submitted 2011-09-22 · 🧮 math.CA

Continuous horizontally rigid functions of two variables are affine

classification 🧮 math.CA
keywords rigidcontinuousfunctionformgraphhorizontallyonlyvariables
0
0 comments X
read the original abstract

Cain, Clark and Rose defined a function $f\colon \RR^n \to \RR$ to be \emph{vertically rigid} if $\graph(cf)$ is isometric to $\graph (f)$ for every $c \neq 0$. It is \emph{horizontally rigid} if $\graph(f(c \vec{x}))$ is isometric to $\graph (f)$ for every $c \neq 0$ (see \cite{CCR}). In an earlier paper the authors of the present paper settled Jankovi\'c's conjecture by showing that a continuous function of one variable is vertically rigid if and only if it is of the form $a+bx$ or $a+be^{kx}$ ($a,b,k \in \RR$). Later they proved that a continuous function of two variables is vertically rigid if and only if after a suitable rotation around the z-axis it is of the form $a + bx + dy$, $a + s(y)e^{kx}$ or $a + be^{kx} + dy$ ($a,b,d,k \in \RR$, $k \neq 0$, $s : \RR \to \RR$ continuous). The problem remained open in higher dimensions. The characterization in the case of horizontal rigidity is surprisingly simpler. C. Richter proved that a continuous function of one variable is horizontally rigid if and only if it is of the form $a+bx$ ($a,b\in \RR$). The goal of the present paper is to prove that a continuous function of two variables is horizontally rigid if and only if it is of the form $a + bx + dy$ ($a,b,d \in \RR$). This problem also remains open in higher dimensions. The main new ingredient of the present paper is the use of functional equations.

This paper has not been read by Pith yet.

discussion (0)

Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.