1 Introduction
In 1984, Mahler [Reference Mahler12] posed a question regarding how well the elements in the middle-third Cantor set ${\mathcal C}$ can be approximated by rational numbers. This is the starting point for the study of Diophantine approximation on the Cantor set.
The first result towards Mahler’s question is due to Weiss [Reference Weiss14], who showed that when restricted to the Cantor set ${\mathcal C}$ , almost no points (with respect to the standard Cantor measure) can be very well approximated by rational numbers. As a next step, we would like to consider the analogy of Jarník’s theorem on the Cantor set. More precisely, for any $u\ge 2$ , we consider the size of $\mathcal {W}(u)\cap {\mathcal C}$ , where
The main difficulty of Mahler’s question lies in understanding the distribution of the rational numbers lying close to the Cantor set. A well-known subfamily of rational numbers is the set of left endpoints, denoted by $\mathcal {A}$ . Levesley et al. [Reference Levesley, Salp and Velani11] considered how well the points in ${\mathcal C}$ can be approximated by these specific rational numbers $\mathcal {A}$ , presenting a complete metric theory including the measure and Hausdorff dimension. Subsequently, Bugeaud [Reference Bugeaud3] constructed a family of points in ${\mathcal C}$ with any prescribed approximation order (for partial results, see also [Reference Levesley, Salp and Velani11]). Though not a complete answer to Mahler’s question, it is widely believed that
where $\dim _H$ denotes the Hausdorff dimension and $\gamma $ is the dimension of the Cantor set ${\mathcal C}$ . For further information regarding Diophantine approximation on the Cantor set, see [Reference Broderick, Fishman and Reich1, Reference Fishman and Simmons7, Reference Fishman and Simmons8].
To attack the conjecture (1.1), Bugeaud and Durand [Reference Bugeaud and Durand4] presented a probabilistic model of Mahler’s question, that is, given a random translation of the Cantor set ${\mathcal C}$ , it is shown that for Lebesgue almost every $\xi \in [0,1],$
More results about the distribution of rational numbers near the Cantor set are given by Han [Reference Han9] and Schleischitz [Reference Schleischitz13]. Another way to attack the conjecture (1.1) is to enlarge the collection of rational numbers, that is, consider approximation by algebraic numbers of degree less than $n,$ instead of merely focusing on rational numbers. For $n\in {\mathbb N},$ denote by $\mathcal {A}_n$ the set of real algebraic numbers of degree less than or equal to $n.$ For each $\alpha \in \mathcal {A}_n,$ denote by $H(\alpha )$ the height of $\alpha ,$ that is, the maximum modulus of the coefficients of the minimal polynomial of $\alpha .$ Define
When $\psi (q)=q^{-u}$ , we write $\mathcal {M}_n(\psi )$ as $\mathcal {M}_n(u)$ . In this setting, it is believed that
Kristensen [Reference Kristensen10] generalised Weiss’s result to this setting. In [Reference Kristensen10], it was shown that when $\lambda _\psi \geq \min \{2n, {(n+1)}/{\gamma } \},$
where $\lambda _\psi $ denotes the lower order at infinity of the function ${1}/{\psi }$ , namely
In this paper, we consider an analogue of the result of Bugeaud and Durand for the intersection of $\mathcal {M}_n(\psi )$ with a translation of the Cantor set,
To begin, we define a doubling version of this set:
Note that for a fixed $\xi \in {\mathbb R},$ the set $\mathcal {M}_n(\psi )\cap (\xi + {\mathcal C})$ may be regarded as the intersection of $\mathcal {K}_n(\psi )$ with the line $L_{\xi }=\{(x, \xi ): x\in {\mathbb R}\}.$ We now state our main result.
Theorem 1.1. Let $\psi :{\mathbb N} \rightarrow {\mathbb R}_{\geq 0}$ be a positive nonincreasing function. Then
Applying the classical slicing theorem [Reference Falconer6], we deduce the following corollary.
Corollary 1.2. For Lebesgue almost every $\xi \in {\mathbb R},$
2 Proofs
2.1 Lower bounds
We first state some auxiliary lemmas. Let $\mathcal {H}^{\gamma }|_{{\mathcal C}}$ be the Hausdorff measure confined to the Cantor set ${\mathcal C}$ and let $B(x,r)$ denote the ball with centre x and radius r. Then, for any $x\in {\mathcal C}$ and $r>0$ ,
for absolute constants $c_1, c_2$ (see [Reference David and Semmes5]). We adapt the proof of [Reference Falconer6, Proposition 7.9] to obtain the following slicing lemma.
Lemma 2.1. Let A be a Borel subset of $[0,1]^2$ and $L_x$ denote the line parallel to the y-axis through the point $(x, 0)$ . For any $s>\gamma $ ,
Proof. Given $\varepsilon>0,$ for any $\delta>0$ , there is a $\delta $ -cover $\{D_i\}_{i\geq 1}$ of A such that
Each $D_i$ can be surrounded by a square $Q_i$ with sides parallel to the coordinate axes and with side length $\lvert D_i\rvert $ . This gives a $\delta $ -cover of A by cubes without increasing the s-volume, that is,
Let ${\mathbb I}_i$ be the indicator function of $Q_i,$ that is,
For each $x\in {\mathcal C},$ the sets $\{Q_i\cap L_x\}_{i\ge 1}$ form a $\delta $ -cover of $A\cap L_x,$ so
Write $Q_i=[a, a+\lvert Q_i\rvert ]\times [b, b + \lvert Q_i\rvert ]$ . By Fubini’s theorem,
Hence,
Letting $\delta \to 0$ and invoking the arbitrariness of $\varepsilon>0$ ,
The next result deals with the dimension of the set of points which are well approximated by algebraic numbers.
Lemma 2.2 (Bugeaud [Reference Bugeaud2]).
Let $\psi : \mathbb {N}\rightarrow \mathbb {R}^+$ be a positive nonincreasing function. If $\sum _{r=1}^{\infty }r^{n} \psi (r)<+\infty ,$ then
Second, we define a transformation $\Phi : (x, \xi )\rightarrow (x-\xi , \xi )$ from ${\mathbb R}^2$ onto itself. It is obvious that $\Phi $ is bi-Lipschitz and satisfies
Since Hausdorff dimension is invariant under bi-Lipschitz transformations, $\mathcal {K}_n(\psi )$ has the same Hausdorff dimension as $\Phi (\mathcal {K}_n(\psi ))$ . So we need only focus on the dimension of the latter set.
Third, by Lemma 2.1,
where $L_{x_0}$ is the set of points $(x, \xi )\in {\mathbb R}^2$ such that $x=x_0.$ For each $x_0\in {\mathbb R},$
We define a transformation $\Xi : L_{x_0}\to {\mathbb R}$ by $\Xi (x_0, y)=y+x_0$ . Then $\Xi $ is an isometry and
Thus, for any $s\ge 0$ ,
Consequently, (2.2) can be written as
If $s<{(n+1)}/{\lambda _\psi }+\gamma ,$ we deduce from (2.1) that $\mathcal {H}^{s-\gamma }(\mathcal {M}_n(\psi ))$ is infinite, so that $\mathcal {H}^s(\Phi (\mathcal {K}_n(\psi )))$ is also infinite. It follows that
2.2 Upper bounds
It suffices to find a sequence of appropriate coverings of $\Phi (\mathcal {K}_n(\psi )).$ For any $(x, \xi )\in \Phi (\mathcal {K}_n(\psi ))$ , we have $x+\xi \in \mathcal {M}_n(\psi )$ . So, for any integer $H_0\geq 1,$ there exist $H\ge H_0$ and an algebraic number $\alpha \in \mathcal {A}_n$ with $H(\alpha )=H$ such that
Let $j(H)$ be the integer such that
The set ${\mathcal C}$ is naturally covered by $2^{j(H)}$ closed intervals with length ${3^{-j(H)}},$ whose centres are denoted by $x_{j(H), 1}, x_{j(H), 2},\ldots , x_{j(H), 2^{j(H)}}$ . For each $x\in {\mathcal C},$ there is an integer k with $1\le k\le 2^{j(H)}$ such that
By the triangle inequality,
If ${\mathbb R}^2$ is equipped with the product distance, it follows that $(x, \xi )$ belongs to the open ball, denoted by $B_{H, \alpha , k},$ with radius ${3^{-j(H)}}$ centred at $(x_{j(H), k}, \alpha -x_{j(H), k}).$ As a result, for any $H_0\geq 1,$
Let $\sharp $ denote the cardinality of a finite set. Then
By the definition of $\lambda _{\psi }$ , for any $\epsilon>0$ ,
for all sufficiently large H. Thus, for each $s\ge \gamma $ , the s-dimensional Hausdorff measure $\mathcal {H}^s$ of $\Psi (\mathcal {K}_n(\psi ))$ can be estimated as
which converges once $s>{(n+1)}/{\lambda _\psi -\varepsilon }+\gamma .$ Summing up,
This completes the proof of Theorem 1.1.
3 Final remarks
The results of this paper are still valid for the limit set of a rational iterated function system as presented in [Reference Fishman and Simmons7].
Definition 3.1. Let S be a finite set. An iterated function system (IFS) on ${\mathbb R}$ is a collection $\{\mathcal {U}_a\}_{a\in S}$ of contracting similarities $\mathcal {U}_a: {\mathbb R}\rightarrow {\mathbb R}$ satisfying the open set condition: there exists an open set $W\subseteq {\mathbb R}$ such that the collection $\{\mathcal {U}_a(W)\}_{a\in S}$ is a collection of disjoint subsets of $W.$ The limit set, denoted by J, of $\{\mathcal {U}_a\}_{a\in S}$ is the image of the coding map $\pi :E^{{\mathbb N}}\rightarrow {\mathbb R}$ defined by $\{\mathcal {U}_a\}_{a\in S}$ , that is,
Call the IFS rational if, for each $a\in S, \mathcal {U}_a$ preserves ${\mathbb Q}$ , that is,
with $p_a,r_a\in {\mathbb Z}, q_a\in {\mathbb N}$ .
The arguments involved in establishing Theorem 1.1 can be modified in the obvious manner to yield the following generalisation.
Theorem 3.2. Suppose that $\{u_a\}_{a\in S}$ is a rational IFS and J is the corresponding limit set. Let
Then
where $\delta $ is the Hausdorff dimension of J and satisfies
Corollary 3.3. For Lebesgue almost every $\xi \in {\mathbb R},$