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In topology, a discrete space is a particularly simple example of a topological space or similar structure, one in which the points form a discontinuous sequence, meaning they are isolated from each other in a certain sense. The discrete topology is the finest topology that can be given on a set. Every subset is open in the discrete topology so that in particular, every singleton subset is an open set in the discrete topology.
Definitions
Given a set :
- the discrete topology on
is defined by letting every subset of
be open (and hence also closed), and
is a discrete topological space if it is equipped with its discrete topology;
- the discrete uniformity on
is defined by letting every superset of the diagonal
in
be an entourage, and
is a discrete uniform space if it is equipped with its discrete uniformity.
- the discrete metric
on
is defined by
for any
In this case
is called a discrete metric space or a space of isolated points.
- a discrete subspace of some given topological space
refers to a topological subspace of
(a subset of
together with the subspace topology that
induces on it) whose topology is equal to the discrete topology. For example, if
has its usual Euclidean topology then
(endowed with the subspace topology) is a discrete subspace of
but
is not.
- a set
is discrete in a metric space
for
if for every
there exists some
(depending on
) such that
for all
; such a set consists of isolated points. A set
is uniformly discrete in the metric space
for
if there exists
such that for any two distinct
A metric space is said to be uniformly discrete if there exists a packing radius
such that, for any
one has either
or
The topology underlying a metric space can be discrete, without the metric being uniformly discrete: for example the usual metric on the set
Let consider this set using the usual metric on the real numbers. Then,
is a discrete space, since for each point
we can surround it with the open interval
where
The intersection
is therefore trivially the singleton
Since the intersection of an open set of the real numbers and
is open for the induced topology, it follows that
is open so singletons are open and
is a discrete space.
However, cannot be uniformly discrete. To see why, suppose there exists an
such that
whenever
It suffices to show that there are at least two points
and
in
that are closer to each other than
Since the distance between adjacent points
and
is
we need to find an
that satisfies this inequality:
Since there is always an bigger than any given real number, it follows that there will always be at least two points in
that are closer to each other than any positive
therefore
is not uniformly discrete.
Properties
The underlying uniformity on a discrete metric space is the discrete uniformity, and the underlying topology on a discrete uniform space is the discrete topology. Thus, the different notions of discrete space are compatible with one another. On the other hand, the underlying topology of a non-discrete uniform or metric space can be discrete; an example is the metric space (with metric inherited from the real line and given by
). This is not the discrete metric; also, this space is not complete and hence not discrete as a uniform space. Nevertheless, it is discrete as a topological space. We say that
is topologically discrete but not uniformly discrete or metrically discrete.
Additionally:
- The topological dimension of a discrete space is equal to 0.
- A topological space is discrete if and only if its singletons are open, which is the case if and only if it does not contain any accumulation points.
- The singletons form a basis for the discrete topology.
- A uniform space
is discrete if and only if the diagonal
is an entourage.
- Every discrete topological space satisfies each of the separation axioms; in particular, every discrete space is Hausdorff, that is, separated.
- A discrete space is compact if and only if it is finite.
- Every discrete uniform or metric space is complete.
- Combining the above two facts, every discrete uniform or metric space is totally bounded if and only if it is finite.
- Every discrete metric space is bounded.
- Every discrete space is first-countable; it is moreover second-countable if and only if it is countable.
- Every discrete space is totally disconnected.
- Every non-empty discrete space is second category.
- Any two discrete spaces with the same cardinality are homeomorphic.
- Every discrete space is metrizable (by the discrete metric).
- A finite space is metrizable only if it is discrete.
- If
is a topological space and
is a set carrying the discrete topology, then
is evenly covered by
(the projection map is the desired covering)
- The subspace topology on the integers as a subspace of the real line is the discrete topology.
- A discrete space is separable if and only if it is countable.
- Any topological subspace of
(with its usual Euclidean topology) that is discrete is necessarily countable.
Any function from a discrete topological space to another topological space is continuous, and any function from a discrete uniform space to another uniform space is uniformly continuous. That is, the discrete space is free on the set
in the category of topological spaces and continuous maps or in the category of uniform spaces and uniformly continuous maps. These facts are examples of a much broader phenomenon, in which discrete structures are usually free on sets.
With metric spaces, things are more complicated, because there are several categories of metric spaces, depending on what is chosen for the morphisms. Certainly the discrete metric space is free when the morphisms are all uniformly continuous maps or all continuous maps, but this says nothing interesting about the metric structure, only the uniform or topological structure. Categories more relevant to the metric structure can be found by limiting the morphisms to Lipschitz continuous maps or to short maps; however, these categories don't have free objects (on more than one element). However, the discrete metric space is free in the category of bounded metric spaces and Lipschitz continuous maps, and it is free in the category of metric spaces bounded by 1 and short maps. That is, any function from a discrete metric space to another bounded metric space is Lipschitz continuous, and any function from a discrete metric space to another metric space bounded by 1 is short.
Going the other direction, a function from a topological space
to a discrete space
is continuous if and only if it is locally constant in the sense that every point in
has a neighborhood on which
is constant.
Every ultrafilter on a non-empty set
can be associated with a topology
on
with the property that every non-empty proper subset
of
is either an open subset or else a closed subset, but never both. Said differently, every subset is open or closed but (in contrast to the discrete topology) the only subsets that are both open and closed (i.e. clopen) are
and
. In comparison, every subset of
is open and closed in the discrete topology.
Examples and uses
A discrete structure is often used as the "default structure" on a set that doesn't carry any other natural topology, uniformity, or metric; discrete structures can often be used as "extreme" examples to test particular suppositions. For example, any group can be considered as a topological group by giving it the discrete topology, implying that theorems about topological groups apply to all groups. Indeed, analysts may refer to the ordinary, non-topological groups studied by algebraists as "discrete groups". In some cases, this can be usefully applied, for example in combination with Pontryagin duality. A 0-dimensional manifold (or differentiable or analytic manifold) is nothing but a discrete and countable topological space (an uncountable discrete space is not second-countable). We can therefore view any discrete countable group as a 0-dimensional Lie group.
A product of countably infinite copies of the discrete space of natural numbers is homeomorphic to the space of irrational numbers, with the homeomorphism given by the continued fraction expansion. A product of countably infinite copies of the discrete space is homeomorphic to the Cantor set; and in fact uniformly homeomorphic to the Cantor set if we use the on the product. Such a homeomorphism is given by using ternary notation of numbers. (See Cantor space.) Every fiber of a locally injective function is necessarily a discrete subspace of its domain.
In the foundations of mathematics, the study of compactness properties of products of is central to the topological approach to the ultrafilter lemma (equivalently, the Boolean prime ideal theorem), which is a weak form of the axiom of choice.
Indiscrete spaces
In some ways, the opposite of the discrete topology is the trivial topology (also called the indiscrete topology), which has the fewest possible open sets (just the empty set and the space itself). Where the discrete topology is initial or free, the indiscrete topology is final or cofree: every function from a topological space to an indiscrete space is continuous, etc.
See also
- Cylinder set
- List of topologies
- Taxicab geometry
References
- Pleasants, Peter A.B. (2000). "Designer quasicrystals: Cut-and-project sets with pre-assigned properties". In Baake, Michael (ed.). Directions in mathematical quasicrystals. CRM Monograph Series. Vol. 13. Providence, RI: American Mathematical Society. pp. 95–141. ISBN 0-8218-2629-8. Zbl 0982.52018.
- Wilansky 2008, p. 35.
- Steen, Lynn Arthur; Seebach, J. Arthur Jr. (1978). Counterexamples in Topology (2nd ed.). Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag. ISBN 3-540-90312-7. MR 0507446. Zbl 0386.54001.
- Wilansky, Albert (17 October 2008) [1970]. Topology for Analysis. Mineola, New York: Dover Publications, Inc. ISBN 978-0-486-46903-4. OCLC 227923899.
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 Discrete space news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2011 Learn how and when to remove this message In topology a discrete space is a particularly simple example of a topological space or similar structure one in which the points form a discontinuous sequence meaning they are isolated from each other in a certain sense The discrete topology is the finest topology that can be given on a set Every subset is open in the discrete topology so that in particular every singleton subset is an open set in the discrete topology DefinitionsGiven a set X displaystyle X the discrete topology on X displaystyle X is defined by letting every subset of X displaystyle X be open and hence also closed and X displaystyle X is a discrete topological space if it is equipped with its discrete topology the discrete uniformity on X displaystyle X is defined by letting every superset of the diagonal x x x X displaystyle x x x in X in X X displaystyle X times X be an entourage and X displaystyle X is a discrete uniform space if it is equipped with its discrete uniformity the discrete metric r displaystyle rho on X displaystyle X is defined by r x y 1if x y 0if x y displaystyle rho x y begin cases 1 amp text if x neq y 0 amp text if x y end cases for any x y X displaystyle x y in X In this case X r displaystyle X rho is called a discrete metric space or a space of isolated points a discrete subspace of some given topological space Y t displaystyle Y tau refers to a topological subspace of Y t displaystyle Y tau a subset of Y displaystyle Y together with the subspace topology that Y t displaystyle Y tau induces on it whose topology is equal to the discrete topology For example if Y R displaystyle Y mathbb R has its usual Euclidean topology then S 12 13 14 displaystyle S left tfrac 1 2 tfrac 1 3 tfrac 1 4 ldots right endowed with the subspace topology is a discrete subspace of R displaystyle mathbb R but S 0 displaystyle S cup 0 is not a set S displaystyle S is discrete in a metric space X d displaystyle X d for S X displaystyle S subseteq X if for every x S displaystyle x in S there exists some d gt 0 displaystyle delta gt 0 depending on x displaystyle x such that d x y gt d displaystyle d x y gt delta for all y S x displaystyle y in S setminus x such a set consists of isolated points A set S displaystyle S is uniformly discrete in the metric space X d displaystyle X d for S X displaystyle S subseteq X if there exists e gt 0 displaystyle varepsilon gt 0 such that for any two distinct x y S d x y gt e displaystyle x y in S d x y gt varepsilon A metric space E d displaystyle E d is said to be uniformly discrete if there exists a packing radius r gt 0 displaystyle r gt 0 such that for any x y E displaystyle x y in E one has either x y displaystyle x y or d x y gt r displaystyle d x y gt r The topology underlying a metric space can be discrete without the metric being uniformly discrete for example the usual metric on the set 2 n n N0 displaystyle left 2 n n in mathbb N 0 right Proof that a discrete space is not necessarily uniformly discrete Let X 2 n n N0 1 12 14 18 textstyle X left 2 n n in mathbb N 0 right left 1 frac 1 2 frac 1 4 frac 1 8 dots right consider this set using the usual metric on the real numbers Then X displaystyle X is a discrete space since for each point xn 2 n X displaystyle x n 2 n in X we can surround it with the open interval xn e xn e displaystyle x n varepsilon x n varepsilon where e 12 xn xn 1 2 n 2 displaystyle varepsilon tfrac 1 2 left x n x n 1 right 2 n 2 The intersection xn e xn e X displaystyle left x n varepsilon x n varepsilon right cap X is therefore trivially the singleton xn displaystyle x n Since the intersection of an open set of the real numbers and X displaystyle X is open for the induced topology it follows that xn displaystyle x n is open so singletons are open and X displaystyle X is a discrete space However X displaystyle X cannot be uniformly discrete To see why suppose there exists an r gt 0 displaystyle r gt 0 such that d x y gt r displaystyle d x y gt r whenever x y displaystyle x neq y It suffices to show that there are at least two points x displaystyle x and y displaystyle y in X displaystyle X that are closer to each other than r displaystyle r Since the distance between adjacent points xn displaystyle x n and xn 1 displaystyle x n 1 is 2 n 1 displaystyle 2 n 1 we need to find an n displaystyle n that satisfies this inequality 2 n 1 lt r1 lt 2n 1rr 1 lt 2n 1log2 r 1 lt n 1 log2 r lt n 1 1 log2 r lt n displaystyle begin aligned 2 n 1 amp lt r 1 amp lt 2 n 1 r r 1 amp lt 2 n 1 log 2 left r 1 right amp lt n 1 log 2 r amp lt n 1 1 log 2 r amp lt n end aligned Since there is always an n displaystyle n bigger than any given real number it follows that there will always be at least two points in X displaystyle X that are closer to each other than any positive r displaystyle r therefore X displaystyle X is not uniformly discrete PropertiesThe underlying uniformity on a discrete metric space is the discrete uniformity and the underlying topology on a discrete uniform space is the discrete topology Thus the different notions of discrete space are compatible with one another On the other hand the underlying topology of a non discrete uniform or metric space can be discrete an example is the metric space X n 1 n N displaystyle X n 1 n in mathbb N with metric inherited from the real line and given by d x y x y displaystyle d x y left x y right This is not the discrete metric also this space is not complete and hence not discrete as a uniform space Nevertheless it is discrete as a topological space We say that X displaystyle X is topologically discrete but not uniformly discrete or metrically discrete Additionally The topological dimension of a discrete space is equal to 0 A topological space is discrete if and only if its singletons are open which is the case if and only if it does not contain any accumulation points The singletons form a basis for the discrete topology A uniform space X displaystyle X is discrete if and only if the diagonal x x x X displaystyle x x x in X is an entourage Every discrete topological space satisfies each of the separation axioms in particular every discrete space is Hausdorff that is separated A discrete space is compact if and only if it is finite Every discrete uniform or metric space is complete Combining the above two facts every discrete uniform or metric space is totally bounded if and only if it is finite Every discrete metric space is bounded Every discrete space is first countable it is moreover second countable if and only if it is countable Every discrete space is totally disconnected Every non empty discrete space is second category Any two discrete spaces with the same cardinality are homeomorphic Every discrete space is metrizable by the discrete metric A finite space is metrizable only if it is discrete If X displaystyle X is a topological space and Y displaystyle Y is a set carrying the discrete topology then X displaystyle X is evenly covered by X Y displaystyle X times Y the projection map is the desired covering The subspace topology on the integers as a subspace of the real line is the discrete topology A discrete space is separable if and only if it is countable Any topological subspace of R displaystyle mathbb R with its usual Euclidean topology that is discrete is necessarily countable Any function from a discrete topological space to another topological space is continuous and any function from a discrete uniform space to another uniform space is uniformly continuous That is the discrete space X displaystyle X is free on the set X displaystyle X in the category of topological spaces and continuous maps or in the category of uniform spaces and uniformly continuous maps These facts are examples of a much broader phenomenon in which discrete structures are usually free on sets With metric spaces things are more complicated because there are several categories of metric spaces depending on what is chosen for the morphisms Certainly the discrete metric space is free when the morphisms are all uniformly continuous maps or all continuous maps but this says nothing interesting about the metric structure only the uniform or topological structure Categories more relevant to the metric structure can be found by limiting the morphisms to Lipschitz continuous maps or to short maps however these categories don t have free objects on more than one element However the discrete metric space is free in the category of bounded metric spaces and Lipschitz continuous maps and it is free in the category of metric spaces bounded by 1 and short maps That is any function from a discrete metric space to another bounded metric space is Lipschitz continuous and any function from a discrete metric space to another metric space bounded by 1 is short Going the other direction a function f displaystyle f from a topological space Y displaystyle Y to a discrete space X displaystyle X is continuous if and only if it is locally constant in the sense that every point in Y displaystyle Y has a neighborhood on which f displaystyle f is constant Every ultrafilter U displaystyle mathcal U on a non empty set X displaystyle X can be associated with a topology t U displaystyle tau mathcal U cup left varnothing right on X displaystyle X with the property that every non empty proper subset S displaystyle S of X displaystyle X is either an open subset or else a closed subset but never both Said differently every subset is open or closed but in contrast to the discrete topology the only subsets that are both open and closed i e clopen are displaystyle varnothing and X displaystyle X In comparison every subset of X displaystyle X is open and closed in the discrete topology Examples and usesA discrete structure is often used as the default structure on a set that doesn t carry any other natural topology uniformity or metric discrete structures can often be used as extreme examples to test particular suppositions For example any group can be considered as a topological group by giving it the discrete topology implying that theorems about topological groups apply to all groups Indeed analysts may refer to the ordinary non topological groups studied by algebraists as discrete groups In some cases this can be usefully applied for example in combination with Pontryagin duality A 0 dimensional manifold or differentiable or analytic manifold is nothing but a discrete and countable topological space an uncountable discrete space is not second countable We can therefore view any discrete countable group as a 0 dimensional Lie group A product of countably infinite copies of the discrete space of natural numbers is homeomorphic to the space of irrational numbers with the homeomorphism given by the continued fraction expansion A product of countably infinite copies of the discrete space 0 1 displaystyle 0 1 is homeomorphic to the Cantor set and in fact uniformly homeomorphic to the Cantor set if we use the on the product Such a homeomorphism is given by using ternary notation of numbers See Cantor space Every fiber of a locally injective function is necessarily a discrete subspace of its domain In the foundations of mathematics the study of compactness properties of products of 0 1 displaystyle 0 1 is central to the topological approach to the ultrafilter lemma equivalently the Boolean prime ideal theorem which is a weak form of the axiom of choice Indiscrete spacesIn some ways the opposite of the discrete topology is the trivial topology also called the indiscrete topology which has the fewest possible open sets just the empty set and the space itself Where the discrete topology is initial or free the indiscrete topology is final or cofree every function from a topological space to an indiscrete space is continuous etc See alsoCylinder set List of topologies Taxicab geometryReferencesPleasants Peter A B 2000 Designer quasicrystals Cut and project sets with pre assigned properties In Baake Michael ed Directions in mathematical quasicrystals CRM Monograph Series Vol 13 Providence RI American Mathematical Society pp 95 141 ISBN 0 8218 2629 8 Zbl 0982 52018 Wilansky 2008 p 35 Steen Lynn Arthur Seebach J Arthur Jr 1978 Counterexamples in Topology 2nd ed Berlin New York Springer Verlag ISBN 3 540 90312 7 MR 0507446 Zbl 0386 54001 Wilansky Albert 17 October 2008 1970 Topology for Analysis Mineola New York Dover Publications Inc ISBN 978 0 486 46903 4 OCLC 227923899