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MA4266 Topology Lecture 11 Wayne Lawton Department of Mathematics S17-08-17, 65162749 [email protected] http://www.math.nus.edu.sg/~matwml/ http://arxiv.org/find/math/1/au:+Lawton_W/0/1/0/all/0/1 Basics Theorem 6.11: A subset of R n is compact iff it is closed and bounded. Definition: A topological space is countably compact if every countable open cover has a finite subcover. Definition: A topological space is a Lindelöf space if every cover has a countable subcover. Theorem 6.12: If X is a Lindelöf space, then X is compact iff it is countably compact. Theorem 6.13: The Lindelöf Theorem Every second countable space is Lindelöf. Proof see page 175 Bolzano-Weierstrass Property Definition: A topological space X has the BW-property if every infinite subset of X has a limit point. Theorem 2.14: Every compact space has the BWP. Proof Assume to the contrary that X is a compact space and that B is an infinite subset of X that has no limit points. Then B is closed (why?) and B is compact (why?). Since B has no limit points, for every point x in B there exists an open set O  X such that O  B  {x}. Therefore x x O  {Ox : x  B} is an open cover of B. Furthermore O does not have a finite subcover of B (why?). Definition p is an isolated point if {p} is open. See Problem 10 on page 186. Examples Example 6.3.1 (a) Closed bounded intervals [a,b] have the BWP. (b) Open intervals do not have the BWP. (c) Unbounded subsets of R do not have the BWP. (d) The unit sphere S in the Hilbert space 2  (N ) N  {1,2,3,4,...}  ( N )  { ( x1 , x2 ,...) : xk  R, || x ||   k 1 x } 2 S  { x   ( N ) : || x ||  1 } 2 does not have the BWP (why?). 2  2 k Lebesgue Number of an Open Cover ( X , d ) be a metric space and O an open cover of X . A Lebesgue number for O Definition: Let is a positive number  such that every subset of X having diameter less than element in  is contained in some O. Theorem 6.16 If (X ,d) is a compact metric space then every open cover of X has a Lebesgue number. Proof follows from the following Lemma 1 since each subset having diameter less than  is a subset of an open ball of radius  . BWExistence of Lebesgue Number Lemma 1: Let (X ,d) be a metric space that satisfies the Bolzano-Weierstrass property. Then every open cover O Proof Let of X has a Lebesgue number. O contrary that be an open cover of X and assume to the O does not have a Lebesgue number.  in X such that Then there exists a sequence {x } n n 1 B( xn , 1n )  O for every n and for every O  O.  Then {xn }n 1 is infinite (why?) so the BW property implies that it has a limit point a so there exists   0 and O  O with B ( a,  )  O. Then B(a, 2 ) contains  infinitely many members of {xn }n 1. BWExistence of Lebesgue Number  xn with B ( a , Hence 2 ) contains some Then for z  B( xn , 1n ) 1 n  2 . d (a, z )  d (a, xn )  d ( xn , z )  2  2     so B( xn , 1n )  B(a,  )  O. This contradicting the initial assumption that for all B( xn , 1n )  O, n  1, O  O and completes the proof of Lemma 1. Total Boundedness ( X , d ) be a metric space and   0. An   net for X is a finite subset A  X such that d ( x, A )   , x  X . The metric space X is totally bounded if it has an   net for every   0. Definition: Let Lemma 2: Let ( X , d ) be a metric space that satisfies the Bolzano-Weierstrass property. Then X is TB. Proof Assume to the contrary that there exists  such that X does not have an   net. Choose  a1  X and construct a sequence {ak }k 1 with ak 1   j 1 B(a j ,  ) that has no limit point. k 0 Compactness and the BWP Theorem 6.15: For metric spaces compactness = BWP. Proof Theorem 4.14 implies that compactness  BWP. For the converse let space O be an open cover of a metric ( X , d ) having the Bolzano-Weierstrass property. Lemma 1 implies that there exists   0 such that for x  X the open ball B( x,  ) is contained in some member of O. Lemma 2 implies that there exists a finite every subset A  {x1 ,..., xn }  X such that {B( xk ,  ) : k Choose B( xk ,  )  Ok  O, k and observe that {Ok : k  1,..., n} covers X . an open cover of X.  1,..., n}  1,..., n Compactness for Subsets of R Theorem 6.17: For a subset A R n n the following conditions are equivalent: is compact. (c) A A A (d) A is closed and bounded. (a) (b) has the BWP. is countably compact. Question Are these conditions equivalent for A   2 ( N ) ? Assignment 11 Read pages 175-180 Exercise 6.3 problems 2, 3, 4, 5, 9, 13, 14, 15