Profile directory About Mobile apps
Log in Sign up
arXiv Math @arxiv_math@qoto.org
Follow

Why the p-norms $p{=}1$, $p{=}2$ and $p{=}\infty$ are so special? An answer based on spatial uniformity https://arxiv.org/abs/2411.13567 #mathST #mathNA #statTH #csCR #csNA

Why the p-norms $p{=}1$, $p{=}2$ and $p{=}\infty$ are so special? An answer based on spatial uniformity

Among all metrics based on p-norms, the Manhattan (p=1), euclidean (p=2) and Chebyshev distances (p=infinity) are the most widely used for their interpretability, simplicity and technical convenience. But these are not the only arguments for the ubiquity of these three p-norms. This article proves that there is a volume-surface correspondence property that is unique to them. More precisely, it is shown that sampling uniformly from the volume of an n-dimensional p-ball and projecting to its surface is equivalent to directly sampling uniformly from its surface if and only if p is 1, 2 or infinity. Sampling algorithms and their implementations in Python are also provided.

arXiv.org
November 23, 2024 at 3:10 AM · · feed2toot · 0 · 0 · 0
Sign in to participate in the conversation
Qoto Mastodon

QOTO: Question Others to Teach Ourselves
An inclusive, Academic Freedom, instance
All cultures welcome.
Hate speech and harassment strictly forbidden.

Trending now

#news0 people talking
0
#fisticuffasongorpoem0 people talking
0
#HashtagGames0 people talking
0

Resources

  • Terms of service
  • Privacy policy

Developers

  • Documentation
  • API

What is Mastodon?

qoto.org

  • About
  • v3.5.19-qoto

More…

  • Source code
  • Mobile apps
v3.5.19-qoto · Privacy policy