MA4266 Topology Wayne Lawton Department of Mathematics S17-08-17, 65162749

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Completeness and Expressiveness
Advertisements

The proof is quite similar to that of a previous result: a compact subspace of a Hausdorff is closed. Theorem: If topological X  space is compact and.
Discrete Mathematics Lecture 5 Alexander Bukharovich New York University.
Week 21 Basic Set Theory A set is a collection of elements. Use capital letters, A, B, C to denotes sets and small letters a 1, a 2, … to denote the elements.
Chaper 3 Weak Topologies. Reflexive Space.Separabe Space. Uniform Convex Spaces.
CS 454 Theory of Computation Sonoma State University, Fall 2011 Instructor: B. (Ravi) Ravikumar Office: 116 I Darwin Hall Original slides by Vahid and.
Discrete Mathematics Lecture 4 Harper Langston New York University.
1 Numerical geometry of non-rigid shapes Mathematical background Mathematical background Tutorial 1 © Maks Ovsjanikov, Alex & Michael Bronstein tosca.cs.technion.ac.il/book.
1 Set Theory. Notation S={a, b, c} refers to the set whose elements are a, b and c. a  S means “a is an element of set S”. d  S means “d is not an element.
1 Set Theory. Notation S={a, b, c} refers to the set whose elements are a, b and c. a  S means “a is an element of set S”. d  S means “d is not an element.
Survey of Mathematical Ideas Math 100 Chapter 2
Topological Nets and Filters Mark Hunnell. Outline 1.Motivations for Nets and Filters 2.Basic Definitions 3.Construction of Equivalence 4.Comparison and.
MA5209 Algebraic Topology Wayne Lawton Department of Mathematics National University of Singapore S ,
MA4266 Topology Wayne Lawton Department of Mathematics S ,
Department of Mathematics
MA4266 Topology Wayne Lawton Department of Mathematics S ,
MA4266 Topology Wayne Lawton Department of Mathematics S ,
MA4266 Topology Wayne Lawton Department of Mathematics S ,
MA5209 Algebraic Topology Wayne Lawton Department of Mathematics National University of Singapore S ,
TRAJECTORIES IN LIE GROUPS Wayne M. Lawton Dept. of Mathematics, National University of Singapore 2 Science Drive 2, Singapore
MA4266 Topology Wayne Lawton Department of Mathematics S ,
MA5296 Lecture 1 Completion and Uniform Continuity Wayne M. Lawton Department of Mathematics National University of Singapore 2 Science Drive 2 Singapore.
Relations, Functions, and Countability
March 24, 2006 Fixed Point Theory in Fréchet Space D. P. Dwiggins Systems Support Office of Admissions Department of Mathematical Sciences Analysis Seminar.
MA4266 Topology Wayne Lawton Department of Mathematics S ,
Rules of the game  You will work with your Unit 3 group  We will have 4 rounds of 6 questions each. Most are multiple choice; some are fill in the blank.
Positively Expansive Maps and Resolution of Singularities Wayne Lawton Department of Mathematics National University of Singapore
Introduction to Real Analysis Dr. Weihu Hong Clayton State University 8/27/2009.
Revision lecture MA30041: Metric Spaces. Just to become familiar with the clicker: What day of the week is today? 1.Sunday 2.Monday 3.Tuesday 4.Wednesday.
MA4229 Lectures 9, 10 Weeks 5-7 Sept 7 - Oct 1, 2010 Chapter 7 The theory of minimax approximation Chapter 8 The exchange algorithm.
Discrete Mathematics Set.
MA5209 Algebraic Topology Wayne Lawton Department of Mathematics National University of Singapore S ,
Lecture 4 Infinite Cardinals. Some Philosophy: What is “2”? Definition 1: 2 = 1+1. This actually needs the definition of “1” and the definition of the.
Making Mountains Out of Molehills The Banach-Tarski Paradox By Bob Kronberger Jay Laporte Paul Miller Brian Sikora Aaron Sinz.
MA5238 Fourier Analysis Wayne Lawton Department of Mathematics S ,
CS 285- Discrete Mathematics
Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. CHAPTER 8 RELATIONS.
MA4266 Topology Wayne Lawton Department of Mathematics S ,
MA5209 Algebraic Topology Wayne Lawton Department of Mathematics National University of Singapore S ,
Summary of the Last Lecture This is our second lecture. In our first lecture, we discussed The vector spaces briefly and proved some basic inequalities.
Section 2.5. Cardinality Definition: A set that is either finite or has the same cardinality as the set of positive integers (Z + ) is called countable.
MA4266 Topology Wayne Lawton Department of Mathematics S ,
Thinking Mathematically Venn Diagrams and Set Operations.
Chapter 2 1. Chapter Summary Sets (This Slide) The Language of Sets - Sec 2.1 – Lecture 8 Set Operations and Set Identities - Sec 2.2 – Lecture 9 Functions.
Week 8 - Wednesday.  What did we talk about last time?  Relations  Properties of relations  Reflexive  Symmetric  Transitive.
MA4266 Topology Wayne Lawton Department of Mathematics S ,
INTERPOLATORY SOLUTIONS OF LINEAR ODE’S AND EXTENSIONS Wayne M. Lawton Dept. of Mathematics, National University of Singapore 2 Science Drive 2, Singapore.
MA4266 Topology Wayne Lawton Department of Mathematics S ,
MA4266 Topology Wayne Lawton Department of Mathematics S ,
Department of Mathematics
MA5238 Fourier Analysis Wayne Lawton Department of Mathematics S ,
MA5209 Algebraic Topology Wayne Lawton Department of Mathematics National University of Singapore S ,
Chapter 2 Sets and Functions.
Set Theory.
Chapter 5 Limits and Continuity.
Department of Mathematics
Week 7 - Monday CS322.
Department of Mathematics
Chapter 3 The Real Numbers.
Continuity of Darboux functions Nikita Shekutkovski, Beti Andonovic
Chapter 3 The Real Numbers.
Chapter 3 The Real Numbers.
Introduction to Real Analysis
Compactness in Metric space
Some Review Problems for Math 141 Final
Chapter 3 The Real Numbers.
Chapter 3 The Real Numbers.
Chapter 5 Limits and Continuity.
MA5242 Wavelets Lecture 1 Numbers and Vector Spaces
CSC102 - Discrete Structures (Discrete Mathematics) Set Operations
Presentation transcript:

MA4266 Topology Wayne Lawton Department of Mathematics S , Lecture 10. Tuesday 2 March 2010

Review of Chapter 5 Last Thursday and Friday we discussed problems: Assigned in Lecture , 8, 14, , 2 We also assigned two challenging problems: Assigned in Lecture , 3, 10, , Construct a space that is locally connected but not locally path connected. 2. Use a cut point argument to prove that (0,1) is not homeomorphic to [0,1].

Review of Chapter 2 Theorem 2.11: Cantor’s Nested Intervals Theorem Theorem 2.12: The Heine-Borel Theorem Theorem 2.13: The Bolzano-Weierstrass Theorem

Covers Definition: Letbe a subset of a set A cover ofis a collection of subsets of such that Examples Question Which covers are finite ? Countable ?

Subcovers Definition: Letbe a subset of a set a cover of such that A subcover (ofderived from and ) is a ofcover be Lemma Ifis finite then every cover ofhas a finite subcover. Question Give an example of this lemma.

Open Covers Definition: Letbe a subset of a topological space An open cover ofis a cover of open. whose elements are Example is an open cover and is an subcover (obviously this subcover is open) An finite cover ofis a cover ofthat is finite.

Compact Spaces Definition: A topological spaceis compact if every open cover of of has a finite subcover. equivalent conditions: 1.is a compact topological space (regarded as A subspace is compact if it satisfies either of the following a topological space with the subspace topology). 2. Every open cover ofthat consists of open subsets ofhas a finite subcover.

Examples Example (of compact spaces) (a) Finite spaces with the finite complement topology (b) Closed bounded intervals (c) Closed bounded subsets of (d) Example (of noncompact spaces) (a) Any infinite discrete topological space (b) The open interval (c)

Finite Intersection Property Definition A family of subsets of X has the finite Question What is the intersection of (all) these sets? has nonempty intersection. Example Theorem 6.1: A spaceis compact iff every family of intersection property if every finite subcollection closed sets in has nonempty intersection. with the finite intersection property Proof Follows from De Morgan’s Laws.

Cantor’s Theorem of Deduction Theorem 6.2: Let Proof ??? sequence of nonempty, closed, bounded subsets of Then Question Why assume both closed and bounded ? be a nested Theorem 6.3: Closed subset of compact  compact. Proof ???

Properties of Compact Sets be a compact subset of a Hausdorff spaceProof Let and let Theorem 6.4: Compact subset of Hausdorff  closed. It suffices to show that there exists an open subsetwith Sinceis Hausdorff, for everythere exist disjoint open subsetswith Clearlyis an open cover of Sinceis compact there exist such thatis a cover ofConstruct Then is open.and

Properties of Compact Sets and of a Hausdorff spacethen there exist disjoint open Theorem 6.5: Ifare disjoint compact subsets subsetswithandof Proof Similar to the proof of theorem 6.4. Question Construct an example of a compact subset of a topological spacesuch thatis not closed. Hint:has two points.

Compactness and Continuity space is compact. Theorem 6.6: The continuous image of a compact Proof Easy. is continuous then is compact andis Hausdorff and is closed. Theorem 6.7: If Theorem 6.8: Ifis compact andis Hausdorff and is a continuous bijection thenis a homeomorphism. Proof Easy. Theorem 6.9: Ifis compact and is continuous then there exists such that Proof Easy.

Compactness and Continuity be metric spaces. ADefinition Let function there exists is uniformly continuous if for every such that Theorem 6.10: Ifis a compact metric space isandis a metric space and continuous thenis uniformly continuous. Proof see pages Question Show that uniform continuity  continuity. Question Give an example of a continuous function that is not uniformly continuous.

Tutorial Assignment 10 Read pages Exercise 6.1 problems 3, 6 Exercise 6.2 problems 1, 2, 3, 4 Prepare for Thursday’s Tutorial Complete the proof of the Lemma, page 172 for n > 2.

Written Homework 2 A chain connecting p and q is a finite sequence 1. Let DUE Tuesday 16 March be a topological space and let of open subsets ofsuch that and Prove that ifis connected and ifis an open cover ofthen for everythere exists a chain connecting p and q such that each

Written Homework 2 Prove that if 2. Review the Hyperspace vufoil #7 in Lecture 5. DUE Tuesday 16 March is a totally bounded metric space then the hyperspace metric space is compact then is also totally bounded.Then prove that if is compact. 3. Do Problem 5, (a),(b),(c), (d) on page 172.