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In my work I came up with a continuous function $f(x)$ on $[0, 1]$ with the following properties:

  1. $f(0) = 0$,
  2. $f\left(\frac{1}{n}\right) = 0$ for all natural $n$,
  3. $\displaystyle{f\left(\frac{1}{2}\left(\frac{1}{n^a} + \frac{1}{(n + 1)^a}\right)\right) = \frac{1}{n^a} }$, where $a$ is some positive real parameter, and
  4. in all other intervals the function $f(x)$ is linear.

Given that, for what values of parameter $a$ is the function $f(x)$ of bounded variation on $[0, 1]$?

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    @Aaron: Yes. $ $2011-06-07

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The function will be of bounded variation whenever $a>1$ because even without knowing where the function is switching direction (it will depend on how points of the form $1/n$ and $\frac{m^{-a}+(m+1)^{-a}}{2}$ are interspersed), you can still say that the variation of the function will be less than $2\sum n^{-a}$, which is a convergent series.

The function is also clearly not of bounded variation when $a=1$, because there is a zero between every peak.

However, when $a<1$, the estimate above cannot show that the function is of bounded variation, and without estimates on how often points of them form $\frac{m^{-a}+(m+1)^{-a}}{2}$ are peaks of the function, I can't say that the function will definitely not be of bounded variation. For example, if for some choice of $a$, we only had peaks for $n\approx 2^k$ $k\in \mathbb N$, then the variation would be given by an almost geometric series. Of course, this is very unlikely, but the problem does not seem amenable to any standard techniques.

My guess is that the function is never of bounded variation for $0, but I cannot prove the claim.