Difference between revisions of "Topological space"

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{{Todo|This page is in dire need of an update (was last changed in March 2015, in late Nov 2015 the definition was moved to a subpage, that was it)}}
==Definition==
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==[[Topological space/Definition]]==
A topological space is a set <math>X</math> coupled with a topology on <math>X</math> denoted <math>\mathcal{J}\subset\mathcal{P}(X)</math>, which is a collection of subsets of <math>X</math> with the following properties<ref name="Top">Topology - James R. Munkres - Second Edition</ref><ref name="ITTM">Introduction to Topological Manifolds - Second Edition - John M. Lee</ref><ref name="ITT">Introduction to Topology - Third Edition - Bert Mendelson</ref>:
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{{:Topological space/Definition}}
 
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# Both <math>\emptyset,X\in\mathcal{J}</math>
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# For the collection <math>\{U_\alpha\}_{\alpha\in I}\subseteq\mathcal{J}</math> where <math>I</math> is any indexing set, <math>\cup_{\alpha\in I}U_\alpha\in\mathcal{J}</math> - that is it is closed under union (infinite, finite, whatever)
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# For the collection <math>\{U_i\}^n_{i=1}\subseteq\mathcal{J}</math> (any finite collection of members of the topology) that <math>\cap^n_{i=1}U_i\in\mathcal{J}</math>
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We write the topological space as <math>(X,\mathcal{J})</math> or just <math>X</math> if the topology on <math>X</math> is obvious.
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* We call the elements of {{M|\mathcal{J} }} "[[Open set|open sets]]"
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==Examples==
 
==Examples==

Revision as of 01:49, 29 November 2015


TODO: This page is in dire need of an update (was last changed in March 2015, in late Nov 2015 the definition was moved to a subpage, that was it)


Topological space/Definition

A topological space is a set X coupled with a "topology", J on X. We denote this by the ordered pair (X,J).

  • A topology, J is a collection of subsets of X, JP(X) with the following properties[1][2][3]:
  1. Both ,XJ
  2. For the collection {Uα}αIJ where I is any indexing set, αIUαJ - that is it is closed under union (infinite, finite, whatever - "closed under arbitrary union")
  3. For the collection {Ui}ni=1J (any finite collection of members of the topology) that ni=1UiJ
  • We call the elements of J "open sets", that is SJ[S is an open set], each S is exactly what we call an 'open set'

As mentioned above we write the topological space as (X,J); or just X if the topology on X is obvious from the context.

Examples

See Also

References

  1. Jump up Topology - James R. Munkres
  2. Jump up Introduction to Topological Manifolds - John M. Lee
  3. Jump up Introduction to Topology - Bert Mendelson