Product topology
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As a part of the topology patrol
- Note: for finite collections of topological spaces the product and box topology agree. In general however the box topology does not satisfy the characteristic property of the product topology.
Contents
[hide]Definition
Given an arbitrary family of topological spaces, ((Xα,Jα))α∈I the product topology is a topology defined on the set ∏α∈IXα (where ∏ denotes the Cartesian product) to be the topology generated by the basis:
- B:={∏α∈IUα| (Uα)α∈I∈∏α∈IJα ∧ |{Uα| Uα≠Xα}|∈N}
The family of functions, {πα:∏β∈IXβ→Xα given by πα:(xγ)γ∈I↦xα | α∈I} are called the canonical projections for the product.
- Claim 1: this is a basis for a topology,
- Claim 2: the canonical projections are continuous
Characteristic property
- f:Y→∏α∈IXα is continuous
- ∀β∈I[fβ:Y→Xβ is continuous] - in words, each component function is continuous
TODO: Link to diagram
OLD PAGE
- Note: Very often confused with the Box topology see Product vs box topology for details
Definition
Given an arbitrary collection of indexed (Xα,Jα)α∈I topological spaces, we define the product topology as follows:
- Let X:=∏α∈IXα be a set imbued with the topology generated by the basis:
- B={∏α∈IUα| ∀α∈I[Uα∈Jα]∧∃n∈N[|{Uα|Uα≠Xα}|=n]}
- That is to say the basis set contains all the products of open sets where the product has a finite number of elements that are not the entirety of their space.
- For the sake of contrast, the Box topology has this definition for a basis:
Bbox={∏α∈IUα| ∀α∈I[Uα∈Jα]} - the product of any collection of open sets
- Note that in the case of a finite number of spaces, say (Xi,Ji)ni=1 then the topology on ∏ni=1Xi is generated by the basis:
- Bfinite={∏ni=1Ui| ∀i∈{1,2,…,n}[Ui∈Ji]} (that is to say the box/product topologies agree)
Characteristic property
Here pi denotes the canonical projection, sometimes πi is used - I avoid using π because it is too similar to ∏ (at least with my handwriting) - I have seen books using both of these conventions
TODO: Finish off
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(Commutes ∀α∈I) |