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Closeness is a basic concept in topology and related areas in mathematics. Intuitively, we say two sets are close if they are arbitrarily near to each other. The concept can be defined naturally in a metric space where a notion of distance between elements of the space is defined, but it can be generalized to topological spaces where we have no concrete way to measure distances.
The closure operator closes a given set by mapping it to a closed set which contains the original set and all points close to it. The concept of closeness is related to limit point.
Definition
Given a metric space a point
is called close or near to a set
if
,
where the distance between a point and a set is defined as
where inf stands for infimum. Similarly a set is called close to a set
if
where
.
Properties
- if a point
is close to a set
and a set
then
and
are close (the converse is not true!).
- closeness between a point and a set is preserved by continuous functions
- closeness between two sets is preserved by uniformly continuous functions
Closeness relation between a point and a set
Let be some set. A relation between the points of
and the subsets of
is a closeness relation if it satisfies the following conditions:
Let and
be two subsets of
and
a point in
.
- If
then
is close to
.
- if
is close to
then
- if
is close to
and
then
is close to
- if
is close to
then
is close to
or
is close to
- if
is close to
and for every point
,
is close to
, then
is close to
.
Topological spaces have a closeness relationship built into them: defining a point to be close to a subset
if and only if
is in the closure of
satisfies the above conditions. Likewise, given a set with a closeness relation, defining a point
to be in the closure of a subset
if and only if
is close to
satisfies the Kuratowski closure axioms. Thus, defining a closeness relation on a set is exactly equivalent to defining a topology on that set.
Closeness relation between two sets
Let ,
and
be sets.
- if
and
are close then
and
- if
and
are close then
and
are close
- if
and
are close and
then
and
are close
- if
and
are close then either
and
are close or
and
are close
- if
then
and
are close
Generalized definition
The closeness relation between a set and a point can be generalized to any topological space. Given a topological space and a point ,
is called close to a set
if
.
To define a closeness relation between two sets the topological structure is too weak and we have to use a uniform structure. Given a uniform space, sets A and B are called close to each other if they intersect all entourages, that is, for any entourage U, (A×B)∩U is non-empty.
See also
- Topological space
- Uniform space
References
- Arkhangel'skii, A. V.; Pontryagin, L.S. General Topology I: Basic Concepts and Constructions, Dimension Theory. Encyclopaedia of Mathematical Sciences (Book 17), Springer 1990, p. 9.
This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Closeness mathematics news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message Closeness is a basic concept in topology and related areas in mathematics Intuitively we say two sets are close if they are arbitrarily near to each other The concept can be defined naturally in a metric space where a notion of distance between elements of the space is defined but it can be generalized to topological spaces where we have no concrete way to measure distances The closure operator closes a given set by mapping it to a closed set which contains the original set and all points close to it The concept of closeness is related to limit point DefinitionGiven a metric space X d displaystyle X d a point p displaystyle p is called close or near to a set A displaystyle A if d p A 0 displaystyle d p A 0 where the distance between a point and a set is defined as d p A infa Ad p a displaystyle d p A inf a in A d p a where inf stands for infimum Similarly a set B displaystyle B is called close to a set A displaystyle A if d B A 0 displaystyle d B A 0 where d B A infb Bd b A displaystyle d B A inf b in B d b A Propertiesif a point p displaystyle p is close to a set A displaystyle A and a set B displaystyle B then A displaystyle A and B displaystyle B are close the converse is not true closeness between a point and a set is preserved by continuous functions closeness between two sets is preserved by uniformly continuous functionsCloseness relation between a point and a setLet V displaystyle V be some set A relation between the points of V displaystyle V and the subsets of V displaystyle V is a closeness relation if it satisfies the following conditions Let A displaystyle A and B displaystyle B be two subsets of V displaystyle V and p displaystyle p a point in V displaystyle V If p A displaystyle p in A then p displaystyle p is close to A displaystyle A if p displaystyle p is close to A displaystyle A then A displaystyle A neq emptyset if p displaystyle p is close to A displaystyle A and B A displaystyle B supset A then p displaystyle p is close to B displaystyle B if p displaystyle p is close to A B displaystyle A cup B then p displaystyle p is close to A displaystyle A or p displaystyle p is close to B displaystyle B if p displaystyle p is close to A displaystyle A and for every point a A displaystyle a in A a displaystyle a is close to B displaystyle B then p displaystyle p is close to B displaystyle B Topological spaces have a closeness relationship built into them defining a point p displaystyle p to be close to a subset A displaystyle A if and only if p displaystyle p is in the closure of A displaystyle A satisfies the above conditions Likewise given a set with a closeness relation defining a point p displaystyle p to be in the closure of a subset A displaystyle A if and only if p displaystyle p is close to A displaystyle A satisfies the Kuratowski closure axioms Thus defining a closeness relation on a set is exactly equivalent to defining a topology on that set Closeness relation between two setsLet A displaystyle A B displaystyle B and C displaystyle C be sets if A displaystyle A and B displaystyle B are close then A displaystyle A neq emptyset and B displaystyle B neq emptyset if A displaystyle A and B displaystyle B are close then B displaystyle B and A displaystyle A are close if A displaystyle A and B displaystyle B are close and B C displaystyle B subset C then A displaystyle A and C displaystyle C are close if A displaystyle A and B C displaystyle B cup C are close then either A displaystyle A and B displaystyle B are close or A displaystyle A and C displaystyle C are close if A B displaystyle A cap B neq emptyset then A displaystyle A and B displaystyle B are closeGeneralized definitionThe closeness relation between a set and a point can be generalized to any topological space Given a topological space and a point p displaystyle p p displaystyle p is called close to a set A displaystyle A if p cl A A displaystyle p in operatorname cl A overline A To define a closeness relation between two sets the topological structure is too weak and we have to use a uniform structure Given a uniform space sets A and B are called close to each other if they intersect all entourages that is for any entourage U A B U is non empty See alsoTopological space Uniform spaceReferencesArkhangel skii A V Pontryagin L S General Topology I Basic Concepts and Constructions Dimension Theory Encyclopaedia of Mathematical Sciences Book 17 Springer 1990 p 9