Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- CHAPTER I RATIONAL AND IRRATIONAL NUMBERS
- CHAPTER II REPRESENTATION OF NUMBERS ON THE STRAIGHT LINE
- CHAPTER III THE DESCRIPTIVE THEORY OF LINEAR SETS OF POINTS
- CHAPTER IV POTENCY, AND THE GENERALISED IDEA OF A CARDINAL NUMBER
- CHAPTER V CONTENT
- CHAPTER VI ORDER
- CHAPTER VII CANTOR'S NUMBERS
- CHAPTER VIII PRELIMINARY NOTIONS OF PLANE SETS
- CHAPTER IX REGIONS AND SETS OF REGIONS
- CHAPTER X CURVES
- CHAPTER XI POTENCY OF PLANE SETS
- CHAPTER XII PLANE CONTENT AND AREA
- CHAPTER XIII LENGTH AND LINEAR CONTENT
- APPENDIX
- BIBLIOGRAPHY
- INDEX OF PROPER NAMES
- GENERAL INDEX
CHAPTER X - CURVES
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2010
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- CHAPTER I RATIONAL AND IRRATIONAL NUMBERS
- CHAPTER II REPRESENTATION OF NUMBERS ON THE STRAIGHT LINE
- CHAPTER III THE DESCRIPTIVE THEORY OF LINEAR SETS OF POINTS
- CHAPTER IV POTENCY, AND THE GENERALISED IDEA OF A CARDINAL NUMBER
- CHAPTER V CONTENT
- CHAPTER VI ORDER
- CHAPTER VII CANTOR'S NUMBERS
- CHAPTER VIII PRELIMINARY NOTIONS OF PLANE SETS
- CHAPTER IX REGIONS AND SETS OF REGIONS
- CHAPTER X CURVES
- CHAPTER XI POTENCY OF PLANE SETS
- CHAPTER XII PLANE CONTENT AND AREA
- CHAPTER XIII LENGTH AND LINEAR CONTENT
- APPENDIX
- BIBLIOGRAPHY
- INDEX OF PROPER NAMES
- GENERAL INDEX
Summary
A curve has already been defined in Ch. IX. The definition is repeated here.
DEF. A plane set of points, dense nowhere in the plane, such that, given any small norm e, and describing round each point of the set a small region of span less than e, these small regions generate a single region Re, whose span does not decrease indefinitely, is called a curved arc, or shortly a curve.
The following then follow from the investigations on regions:—
A curve is never a point and never a region, and, only when the span of the region Re in one direction diminishes without limit as e does so, is it a stretch (segment of a, straight line).
The points of a curve form a connected set.
A closed connected set dense nowhere in the plane is a curve, and is said to be a complete curve.
The points of a curve may or may not form a closed set: the non-included limiting points may be finite, or countably infinite, or more than countable.
DEF. An arc, every one of whose points is a point of a certain curve, is called an arc of that curve.
The following property of a curve is an immediate consequence of the definition :—
Given any two points P and Q of a curve, there is at least one arc of the curve PQ not containing P nor Q, but having both these points as limiting points.
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- Information
- The Theory of Sets of Points , pp. 219 - 232Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1906