• For all
x in
X, 0\le f(x). • For each
x in
X, (d(x,y))_{y\in X} is extremal. (Proof: Use symmetry and the
triangle inequality.) • If
X is finite, then for any function
f from
X to
R that satisfies the first requirement, the second requirement is equivalent to the condition that for each
x in
X, there exists
y in
X such that
f(
x) +
f(
y) =
d(
x,
y). (If X=\emptyset, then both conditions are true. If X\ne\emptyset, then the supremum is achieved, and the first requirement implies the equivalence.) • Say
|X|=2, and choose distinct
a, b such that
X={a,b}. Then T(X)=\{f\in(\R_{\ge0})^X:f(a)+f(b)=d(a,b)\} is the convex hull of
{{(a,1),(b,0)},{(a,0),(b,1)}}. [Add a picture. Caption: If
X={0,1}, then T(X)=\{v\in(\R_{\ge0})^2:v_0+v_1=d(0,1)\} is the convex hull of
{(0,1),(1,0)}.] • Every extremal function
f on
X is
Katetov:
f satisfies the first requirement and \forall x,y\in X\quad f(x)\le d(x,y)+f(y), or equivalently,
f satisfies the first requirement and \forall x,y\in X\quad|f(y)-f(x)|\le d(x,y) (is 1-
Lipschitz), or equivalently,
f satisfies the first requirement and \forall x\in X\quad\sup\{f(y)-d(x,y):y\in X\}=f(x). •
T(X)⊆C(X). (Lipschitz functions are continuous.) •
T(X) is
equicontinuous. (Follows from every extremal function on
X being 1-Lipschitz; cf. Equicontinuity#Examples.) • Not every Katetov function on
X is extremal. For example, let
a,
b be distinct, let
X = {a,b}, let
d = ([x≠y])x,y in
X be the
discrete metric on
X, and let
f = {(a,1),(b,2)}. Then
f is Katetov but not extremal. (It is almost immediate that
f is Katetov.
f is not extremal because it fails the property in the third bullet of this section.) • If
d is bounded, then every
f in
T(X) is bounded. In fact, for every
f in
T(X), \|f\|_\infty\le\|d\|_\infty. (Note d\in\ell^\infty(X\times X).) (Follows from the third equivalent property in the above section.) • If
d is unbounded, then every
f in
T(X) is unbounded. (Follows from the first requirement.) • T(X) is closed under pointwise limits. For any pointwise convergent f\in (T(X))^\omega, \lim f\in T(X). • If
(X,d) is compact, then
(T(X),δ) is compact. • For any
f,g in
T(X), the difference g-f belongs to \ell^\infty(X), i.e., is bounded. (Use the above bullet.) • The
Kuratowski map e:=((d(x,y))_{y\in X})_{x\in X} is an
isometry. (When
X=∅, the result is obvious. When X≠∅, the
reverse triangle inequality implies the result.) • Let
f in
T(X). For any
a in
X, if
f(a)=0, then
f=e(a). (For every
x in
X we have (e(a))(x)=d(a,x)\le f(a)+f(x)=f(x). From minimality (second equivalent characterization in above section) of
f and the fact that e(a) satisfies the first requirement it follows that f=e_a.) •
(X,d) is
hyperbolic if and only if
(T(X),δ) is hyperbolic. ==Hyperconvexity properties==