A star domain (equivalently, a star-convex or star-shaped set) is not necessarily convex in the ordinary sense.
An annulus is not a star domain.

In geometry, a set in the Euclidean space is called a star domain (or star-convex set, star-shaped set or radially convex set) if there exists an such that for all the line segment from to lies in This definition is immediately generalizable to any real, or complex, vector space.

Intuitively, if one thinks of as a region surrounded by a wall, is a star domain if one can find a vantage point in from which any point in is within line-of-sight. A similar, but distinct, concept is that of a radial set.

Definition

Given two points and in a vector space (such as Euclidean space ), the convex hull of is called the closed interval with endpoints and and it is denoted by

where for every vector

A subset of a vector space is said to be star-shaped at if for every the closed interval A set is star shaped and is called a star domain if there exists some point such that is star-shaped at

A set that is star-shaped at the origin is sometimes called a star set.[1] Such sets are closed related to Minkowski functionals.

Examples

Properties

See also

References

  1. ^ Schechter 1996, p. 303.
  2. ^ Drummond-Cole, Gabriel C. "What polygons can be shrinked into themselves?". Math Overflow. Retrieved 2 October 2014.