Definition Let a metric space $(X,d)$ be given. A similitude is a function $f: X \to X$ such that, for all $x,y \in X$, $d(f(x),f(y)) = r \cdot d(x,y)$ for some positive real number $r>0$.
Questions:
1. What is the name of metric space in which every similitude is surjective?
For example $\mathbb{R}$ is such a space (I think) but $\mathbb{Z}$ is not.
2. The set of all surjective similitudes is always a group. However, unlike in $\mathbb{R}^n$, it is not always the case that, for each $r>0$, there exists a similitude $f:X \to X$ with scaling factor $r$.
What is the name of such a space, i.e. a space for which $SurjSim(X) \cong \mathbb{R}^+ \times Iso(X)$?
(Where $Iso(X)$ is the group of isometries of $X$.)
3. For any space as in 2., does $Iso(X)$ only determine $d$ up to a positive constant?
This is true for the Euclidean metric on $\mathbb{R}^n$.
4. Is 2. equivalent to the isometry group $Iso(X)$ being a homogeneous space with respect to $\mathbb{R}^+$? Or even to $X$ itself being a homogeneous space with respect to $\mathbb{R}^+$?
For example, any finite-dimensional vector space satisfies these properties -- is there a name for more general spaces which are "scaleable" like this? Homogeneous space can refer to any type of group action, including the group action of a group $G$ on its corresponding torsor which denotes a notion of translation, not of scaling.
Note: I think these may have something to do with the notions of (complete) convex metric spaces (for $r<1$) and (complete) externally convex metric spaces$^*$ (for $r>1$).
*See the third page, p. 231, here.
Also note that any geodesic space is a convex metric space as a result of Lemma 2.2. (ii) here.
So I think it is possible to show that an externally convex geodesic space satisfies 2., using the fact that any geodesic space is complete, Lemma 2.2(ii), and binary search.