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We carry on an analysis of the size of the contact surface of a Cheeger set $E$ with the boundary of its ambient space $Omega$. We show that this size is strongly related to the regularity of $partial Omega$ by providing bounds on the Hausdorff dimension of $partial Ecap partialOmega$. In particular we show that, if $partial Omega$ has $C^{1,alpha}$ regularity then $mathcal{H}^{d-2+alpha}(partial Ecap partialOmega)>0$. This shows that a sufficient condition to ensure that $mathcal{H}^{d-1}(partial Ecap partial Omega)>0$ is that $partial Omega$ has $C^{1,1}$ regularity. Since the Hausdorff bounds can be inferred in dependence of the regularity of $partial E$ as well, we obtain that $Omega$ convex, which yields $partial Ein C^{1,1}$, is also a sufficient condition. Finally, we construct examples showing that such bounds are optimal in dimension $d=2$.
In this paper we introduce a Cheeger-type constant defined as a minimization of a suitable functional among all the $N$-clusters contained in an open bounded set $Omega$. Here with $N$-Cluster we mean a family of $N$ sets of finite perimeter, disjoin
We develop the notion of higher Cheeger constants for a measurable set $Omega subset mathbb{R}^N$. By the $k$-th Cheeger constant we mean the value [h_k(Omega) = inf max {h_1(E_1), dots, h_1(E_k)},] where the infimum is taken over all $k$-tuples of m
We consider a variational scheme for the anisotropic (including crystalline) mean curvature flow of sets with strictly positive anisotropic mean curvature. We show that such condition is preserved by the scheme, and we prove the strict convergence in
We study existence, uniqueness, and regularity properties of the Dirichlet problem related to fractional Dirichlet energy minimizers in a complete doubling metric measure space $(X,d_X,mu_X)$ satisfying a $2$-Poincare inequality. Given a bounded doma
Given a graph, the shortest-path problem requires finding a sequence of edges with minimum cumulative length that connects a source vertex to a target vertex. We consider a generalization of this classical problem in which the position of each vertex