* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download USC3002 Picturing the World Through Mathematics
Continuous function wikipedia , lookup
Michael Atiyah wikipedia , lookup
Surface (topology) wikipedia , lookup
Fundamental group wikipedia , lookup
Covering space wikipedia , lookup
Grothendieck topology wikipedia , lookup
Geometrization conjecture wikipedia , lookup
Brouwer fixed-point theorem wikipedia , lookup
MA4266 Topology Lecture 13. Friday 12 March 2010 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 Finite Products basis the set Question Is 2 R with the usual topology has a B {O1 O2 : O1 , O2 open R } Example 7.1.1 B a topology for 2 R ? Question What is the ‘usual’ basis for 2 R ? Question How can this example be generalized to define a basis for a topology on the product of spaces ( X 1 , T1 ),..., ( X n , Tn ) ? Question Why are the projections maps continuous ? Finite Products Theorem 7.1 Let f :Y X where Y is a space and X i 1 X i . n f is continuous iff the composition pi f : Y X i is continuous for each projection pi . X is a product space Proof First observe that a subbasis for 1 i Then X is given by S { p (Oi ) : 1 i n, Oi open X i }. Theorem 4.11 (p 116) implies that f is continuous iff each f 1 ( pi1 (Oi )) ( pi f ) 1 (Oi ) is open. Finite Products Theorem 7.2 The product of a finite number of Hausdorff spaces is a Hausdorff space. Theorem 7.3 The product of a finite number of connected spaces is a connected space. Theorem 7.4 The product of a finite number of separable spaces is separable. Theorem 7.5 The product of a finite number of 1st (2nd) countable spaces is 1st (2nd) countable. Theorem 7.6 If ( X 1 , d1 ),..., ( X n , d n ) then the product n topology on i 1 X i is the topology generated by the product metric defined on page 83. Finite Products X be compact it is sufficient that there exist a basis B for X such that every cover B B of X has a finite subcover. c Lemma In order that a space Proof Let B be such a basis and let open cover of Ox O with be an X . For each x X there exists x Ox and Bx Bc with x Bx Ox . open cover of O Then {Bx : x X } is an X so it has a finite subcover {Bx1 ,..., Bxn } hence {Ox1 ,..., Oxn } covers X. Finite Products Theorem 7.7 The product of a finite number of compact spaces is compact. Proof It suffices to show that if X1 and X2 are X1 X 2 is compact. Let B {U V : U open X1,V open X 2 } be the basis for the product topology and O B be a cover of X1 X 2 . For x X1 the subset m {x} X 2 is compact so it is a subset of i 1 U x,i Vx,i compact then x where each U x ,i Vx ,i B. Let U x i 1 U x ,i . Then mx U x X 2 i 1 U x Vx,i . mx Read rest of proof p. 202-203. Arbitrary Products Definition If A is an index set and { X : A} a family of sets, their Cartesian product is the set: X X x : A X : x x ( ) X , A A A For A, the function p : X X given by p ( x) x is called the projection map th of X onto the coordinate set X . Definition If each X is a nonempty topological space, X is the topology generated 1 by the subbasis S p (O ) : A, O open X . the product topology on Arbitrary Products Theorem 7.8 Generalization of Theorem 7.1 that characterizes continuity of maps using projections. Theorem 7.9 Hausdorff space products are Hausdorff Theorem 7.10 Connected space products are conn. Proof Let y X X and let A be the subset of X Yk , k 1 of points that differ from y in at most k coordinates. Problem: Show that each Yk connected. Then and X Y Y k 1 Yk is connected therefore X is connected. Arbitrary Products Lemma: The Alexander Subbasis Theorem A space X is compact iff there exists a subbasis S for X such that every cover Sc S of X has a finite subcover. Proof See exercise 12 on p. 210-211. Theorem 7.11: The Tychonoff Theorem The product X A X of compact spaces is compact. 1 S { p (O) : O open X } cover X . We show that Sc has a finite subcover. For each A let U be the collection of open O X such that 1 p (O ) Sc . Problem: prove that U does not cover X . O . Construct x X so that for every A, x OU Then x OS O contradicting Sc covering X . Proof: Let Sc c Examples Example 7.2.1 The Hilbert Cube I [0,1] is the product of a countably infinite number of closed intervals. It is H 2 ( N ) by the map xn x1 x2 f ( x1 , x2 ,..., xn ,...) ( 1 , 2 ,..., n ,...) Infinite Dimensional Euclidean Space R can be embedded in Hilbert space embedded in the Hilbert Cube by the map g ( x1 , x2 ,..., xn ,...) ( 12 1 arctan x1 ,..., 12 1 arctan xn ,...) A deeper result: H 2 ( N ) is homeomorphic to R . Proof. R. D. Anderson and R. H. Bing, A complete elementary proof that Hilbert space is homeomorphic to the countable infinite product of lines, Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 74 (1968),771-792. Examples Example 7.2.2 The Cantor Set is an Infinite Product The Cantor set, consisting of all numbers in [0,1] having the ternary (base 3) expansion x .x1 x2 x3 ... j 1 x j 3 , x j {0,2} j is homeomorphic to the infinite product by the map F (.x1 x2 x3...) ( , ,...) x1 2 Proof See page 209. x2 2 {0,1} {0,1}N Assignment 13 Read pages 195-203, 204-209 Prepare to solve during Tutorial Thursday 18 March Exercise 7.1 problems 4, 10, 11 Exercise 7.2 problems 5, 11, 12