Topology / Topological Space / Redefine Neighborhood, Limit Point, Interior Point and Exterior Point
Topology / Topological SpacePermalink
Quote from Wikibooks: Topology/Topological Spaces
A topological space is an ordered pair
and itself .- Any (finite or infinite) union of members of
still . - The intersection of any finite number of members of
still .
And
Examples:
- Given
, is the trivial topology of (a.k.a. indiscrete topology).- This is the smallest topology of
- This is the smallest topology of
- Given
, forms another topology of . - Given
, (the power set of ) is called the discrete topology.- This is the largest topology of
- This is the largest topology of
- Given
, the set of integers, and , the collection of all finite subsets of plus itself. is not a topology. Consider all finite sets not containing 0. They , but the union of them is infinite and is not equal to either. So this union .
This definition of a topological space allows us to redefine open sets as well. Our previous definitions (Neighborhood / Open Set / Continuity / Limit Points / Closure / Interior / Exterior / Boundary) required a metric. That is, we needed some notion of distance in order to define open sets. Topological spaces have no such requirement. In fact, the three properties given above–and them alone–are enough to define an open set. Our new definition is this:
The rules above are descriptions of how open sets behave: a collection of sets can be called open if
- the union of an arbitrary number of open sets is open,
- the intersection of a finite number of open sets is open,
- and the space itself is open. (The empty set is considered open by default)
As it happens, the properties we associate with open sets, which allow us to study many topological ideas (like continuity and convergence, which were defined earlier using open sets), are encoded entirely by the three properties described above, without any need for a distance metric at all. This is in fact a very abstract definition, using only the most basic ideas of set theory (subsets, unions and intersections), and it allows enormous flexibility in what can be studied as a topological space (as well as how something can be seen as a topological space; there are many different ways a topology can be chosen on a given set). This definition is so general, in fact, that topological spaces appear naturally in virtually every branch of mathematics, and topology is considered one of the great unifying topics of mathematics.
Redefine NeighborhoodPermalink
Quote from Mathonline: The Open Neighbourhoods of Points in a Topological Space
Definition: Let
- The term “neighbourhood” is used frequently in topology to simply mean “open neighbourhood” when distinction is not important.
Proposition: (Open Neighbourhood Criterion for Open Sets) Let
- 注:原文是 “… is open
there exists …“,这个明显是不对的。考虑他们自己给的例子: 是一个 open set- 对
,明显不可能有一个 neighbourhood 满足
Proof:
Redefine Limit PointPermalink
Let
- Openness of neighbourhood not required here
Redefine Interior PointPermalink
Let
- Equivalently,
is an interior point of if is a neighbourhood of .
Redefine Exterior PointPermalink
Let
- Equivalently,
is an exterior point of if is a neighbourhood of .
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