![Interior (topology)](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly91cGxvYWQud2lraW1lZGlhLm9yZy93aWtpcGVkaWEvY29tbW9ucy90aHVtYi9iL2JhL0ludGVyaW9yX2lsbHVzdHJhdGlvbi5zdmcvMTYwMHB4LUludGVyaW9yX2lsbHVzdHJhdGlvbi5zdmcucG5n.png )
In mathematics, specifically in topology, the interior of a subset S of a topological space X is the union of all subsets of S that are open in X. A point that is in the interior of S is an interior point of S.
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOWlMMkpoTDBsdWRHVnlhVzl5WDJsc2JIVnpkSEpoZEdsdmJpNXpkbWN2TWpJd2NIZ3RTVzUwWlhKcGIzSmZhV3hzZFhOMGNtRjBhVzl1TG5OMlp5NXdibWM9LnBuZw==.png)
The interior of S is the complement of the closure of the complement of S. In this sense interior and closure are dual notions.
The exterior of a set S is the complement of the closure of S; it consists of the points that are in neither the set nor its boundary. The interior, boundary, and exterior of a subset together partition the whole space into three blocks (or fewer when one or more of these is empty).
The interior and exterior of a closed curve are a slightly different concept; see the Jordan curve theorem.
Definitions
Interior point
If is a subset of a Euclidean space, then
is an interior point of
if there exists an open ball centered at
which is completely contained in
(This is illustrated in the introductory section to this article.)
This definition generalizes to any subset of a metric space
with metric
:
is an interior point of
if there exists a real number
such that
is in
whenever the distance
This definition generalizes to topological spaces by replacing "open ball" with "open set". If is a subset of a topological space
then
is an interior point of
in
if
is contained in an open subset of
that is completely contained in
(Equivalently,
is an interior point of
if
is a neighbourhood of
)
Interior of a set
The interior of a subset of a topological space
denoted by
or
or
can be defined in any of the following equivalent ways:
is the largest open subset of
contained in
is the union of all open sets of
contained in
is the set of all interior points of
If the space is understood from context then the shorter notation
is usually preferred to
Examples
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOHhMekZoTDFObGRGOXZabDl5WldGc1gyNTFiV0psY25OZmQybDBhRjlsY0hOcGJHOXVMVzVsYVdkb1ltOTFjbWh2YjJRdWMzWm5Mekl5TUhCNExWTmxkRjl2Wmw5eVpXRnNYMjUxYldKbGNuTmZkMmwwYUY5bGNITnBiRzl1TFc1bGFXZG9ZbTkxY21odmIyUXVjM1puTG5CdVp3PT0ucG5n.png)
- In any space, the interior of the empty set is the empty set.
- In any space
if
then
- If
is the real line
(with the standard topology), then
whereas the interior of the set
of rational numbers is empty:
- If
is the complex plane
then
- In any Euclidean space, the interior of any finite set is the empty set.
On the set of real numbers, one can put other topologies rather than the standard one:
- If
is the real numbers
with the lower limit topology, then
- If one considers on
the topology in which every set is open, then
- If one considers on
the topology in which the only open sets are the empty set and
itself, then
is the empty set.
These examples show that the interior of a set depends upon the topology of the underlying space. The last two examples are special cases of the following.
- In any discrete space, since every set is open, every set is equal to its interior.
- In any indiscrete space
since the only open sets are the empty set and
itself,
and for every proper subset
of
is the empty set.
Properties
Let be a topological space and let
and
be subsets of
is open in
- If
is open in
then
if and only if
is an open subset of
when
is given the subspace topology.
is an open subset of
if and only if
- Intensive:
- Idempotence:
- Preserves/distributes over binary intersection:
- However, the interior operator does not distribute over unions since only
is guaranteed in general and equality might not hold. For example, if
and
then
is a proper subset of
- However, the interior operator does not distribute over unions since only
- Monotone/nondecreasing with respect to
: If
then
Other properties include:
- If
is closed in
and
then
Relationship with closure
The above statements will remain true if all instances of the symbols/words
- "interior", "int", "open", "subset", and "largest"
are respectively replaced by
- "closure", "cl", "closed", "superset", and "smallest"
and the following symbols are swapped:
- "
" swapped with "
"
- "
" swapped with "
"
For more details on this matter, see interior operator below or the article Kuratowski closure axioms.
Interior operator
The interior operator is dual to the closure operator, which is denoted by
or by an overline —, in the sense that
and also
where
is the topological space containing
and the backslash
denotes set-theoretic difference. Therefore, the abstract theory of closure operators and the Kuratowski closure axioms can be readily translated into the language of interior operators, by replacing sets with their complements in
In general, the interior operator does not commute with unions. However, in a complete metric space the following result does hold:
Theorem (C. Ursescu) — Let be a sequence of subsets of a complete metric space
- If each
is closed in
then
- If each
is open in
then
The result above implies that every complete metric space is a Baire space.
Exterior of a set
The exterior of a subset of a topological space
denoted by
or simply
is the largest open set disjoint from
namely, it is the union of all open sets in
that are disjoint from
The exterior is the interior of the complement, which is the same as the complement of the closure; in formulas,
Similarly, the interior is the exterior of the complement:
The interior, boundary, and exterior of a set together partition the whole space into three blocks (or fewer when one or more of these is empty):
where
denotes the boundary of
The interior and exterior are always open, while the boundary is closed.
Some of the properties of the exterior operator are unlike those of the interior operator:
- The exterior operator reverses inclusions; if
then
- The exterior operator is not idempotent. It does have the property that
Interior-disjoint shapes
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOWpMMk16TDBsdWRHVnlhVzl5TFdScGMycHZhVzUwTG5OMlp5OHlNakJ3ZUMxSmJuUmxjbWx2Y2kxa2FYTnFiMmx1ZEM1emRtY3VjRzVuLnBuZw==.png)
Two shapes and
are called interior-disjoint if the intersection of their interiors is empty. Interior-disjoint shapes may or may not intersect in their boundary.
See also
- Algebraic interior – Generalization of topological interior
- DE-9IM – Topological model
- Interior algebra – Algebraic structure
- Jordan curve theorem – A closed curve divides the plane into two regions
- Quasi-relative interior – Generalization of algebraic interior
- Relative interior – Generalization of topological interior
References
- Zalinescu, C (2002). Convex analysis in general vector spaces. River Edge, N.J. London: World Scientific. p. 33. ISBN 981-238-067-1. OCLC 285163112.
- Bourbaki 1989, p. 24.
- Bourbaki 1989, p. 25.
- The analogous identity for the closure operator is
These identities may be remembered with the following mnemonic. Just as the intersection
of two open sets is open, so too does the interior operator distribute over intersections
explicitly:
And similarly, just as the union
of two closed sets is closed, so too does the closure operator distribute over unions
explicitly:
Bibliography
- Bourbaki, Nicolas (1989) [1966]. General Topology: Chapters 1–4 [Topologie Générale]. Éléments de mathématique. Berlin New York: Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 978-3-540-64241-1. OCLC 18588129.
- Dixmier, Jacques (1984). General Topology. Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics. Translated by Berberian, S. K. New York: Springer-Verlag. ISBN 978-0-387-90972-1. OCLC 10277303.
- Császár, Ákos (1978). General topology. Translated by Császár, Klára. Bristol England: Adam Hilger Ltd. ISBN 0-85274-275-4. OCLC 4146011.
- Dugundji, James (1966). Topology. Boston: Allyn and Bacon. ISBN 978-0-697-06889-7. OCLC 395340485.
- (1983). Introduction to General Topology. New York: John Wiley and Sons Ltd. ISBN 978-0-85226-444-7. OCLC 9218750.
- Kelley, John L. (1975) [1955]. General Topology. Graduate Texts in Mathematics. Vol. 27 (2nd ed.). New York: Springer-Verlag. ISBN 978-0-387-90125-1. OCLC 1365153.
- Munkres, James R. (2000). Topology (2nd ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, Inc. ISBN 978-0-13-181629-9. OCLC 42683260.
- Schubert, Horst (1968). Topology. London: Macdonald & Co. ISBN 978-0-356-02077-8. OCLC 463753.
- Wilansky, Albert (17 October 2008) [1970]. Topology for Analysis. Mineola, New York: Dover Publications, Inc. ISBN 978-0-486-46903-4. OCLC 227923899.
- Willard, Stephen (2004) [1970]. General Topology. Mineola, N.Y.: Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0-486-43479-7. OCLC 115240.
External links
- Interior at PlanetMath.
In mathematics specifically in topology the interior of a subset S of a topological space X is the union of all subsets of S that are open in X A point that is in the interior of S is an interior point of S The point x is an interior point of S The point y is on the boundary of S The interior of S is the complement of the closure of the complement of S In this sense interior and closure are dual notions The exterior of a set S is the complement of the closure of S it consists of the points that are in neither the set nor its boundary The interior boundary and exterior of a subset together partition the whole space into three blocks or fewer when one or more of these is empty The interior and exterior of a closed curve are a slightly different concept see the Jordan curve theorem DefinitionsInterior point If S displaystyle S is a subset of a Euclidean space then x displaystyle x is an interior point of S displaystyle S if there exists an open ball centered at x displaystyle x which is completely contained in S displaystyle S This is illustrated in the introductory section to this article This definition generalizes to any subset S displaystyle S of a metric space X displaystyle X with metric d displaystyle d x displaystyle x is an interior point of S displaystyle S if there exists a real number r gt 0 displaystyle r gt 0 such that y displaystyle y is in S displaystyle S whenever the distance d x y lt r displaystyle d x y lt r This definition generalizes to topological spaces by replacing open ball with open set If S displaystyle S is a subset of a topological space X displaystyle X then x displaystyle x is an interior point of S displaystyle S in X displaystyle X if x displaystyle x is contained in an open subset of X displaystyle X that is completely contained in S displaystyle S Equivalently x displaystyle x is an interior point of S displaystyle S if S displaystyle S is a neighbourhood of x displaystyle x Interior of a set The interior of a subset S displaystyle S of a topological space X displaystyle X denoted by intX S displaystyle operatorname int X S or int S displaystyle operatorname int S or S displaystyle S circ can be defined in any of the following equivalent ways int S displaystyle operatorname int S is the largest open subset of X displaystyle X contained in S displaystyle S int S displaystyle operatorname int S is the union of all open sets of X displaystyle X contained in S displaystyle S int S displaystyle operatorname int S is the set of all interior points of S displaystyle S If the space X displaystyle X is understood from context then the shorter notation int S displaystyle operatorname int S is usually preferred to intX S displaystyle operatorname int X S Examplesa displaystyle a is an interior point of M displaystyle M because there is an e neighbourhood of a which is a subset of M displaystyle M In any space the interior of the empty set is the empty set In any space X displaystyle X if S X displaystyle S subseteq X then int S S displaystyle operatorname int S subseteq S If X displaystyle X is the real line R displaystyle mathbb R with the standard topology then int 0 1 0 1 displaystyle operatorname int 0 1 0 1 whereas the interior of the set Q displaystyle mathbb Q of rational numbers is empty int Q displaystyle operatorname int mathbb Q varnothing If X displaystyle X is the complex plane C displaystyle mathbb C then int z C z 1 z C z lt 1 displaystyle operatorname int z in mathbb C z leq 1 z in mathbb C z lt 1 In any Euclidean space the interior of any finite set is the empty set On the set of real numbers one can put other topologies rather than the standard one If X displaystyle X is the real numbers R displaystyle mathbb R with the lower limit topology then int 0 1 0 1 displaystyle operatorname int 0 1 0 1 If one considers on R displaystyle mathbb R the topology in which every set is open then int 0 1 0 1 displaystyle operatorname int 0 1 0 1 If one considers on R displaystyle mathbb R the topology in which the only open sets are the empty set and R displaystyle mathbb R itself then int 0 1 displaystyle operatorname int 0 1 is the empty set These examples show that the interior of a set depends upon the topology of the underlying space The last two examples are special cases of the following In any discrete space since every set is open every set is equal to its interior In any indiscrete space X displaystyle X since the only open sets are the empty set and X displaystyle X itself int X X displaystyle operatorname int X X and for every proper subset S displaystyle S of X displaystyle X int S displaystyle operatorname int S is the empty set PropertiesLet X displaystyle X be a topological space and let S displaystyle S and T displaystyle T be subsets of X displaystyle X int S displaystyle operatorname int S is open in X displaystyle X If T displaystyle T is open in X displaystyle X then T S displaystyle T subseteq S if and only if T int S displaystyle T subseteq operatorname int S int S displaystyle operatorname int S is an open subset of S displaystyle S when S displaystyle S is given the subspace topology S displaystyle S is an open subset of X displaystyle X if and only if int S S displaystyle operatorname int S S Intensive int S S displaystyle operatorname int S subseteq S Idempotence int int S int S displaystyle operatorname int operatorname int S operatorname int S Preserves distributes over binary intersection int S T int S int T displaystyle operatorname int S cap T operatorname int S cap operatorname int T However the interior operator does not distribute over unions since only int S T int S int T displaystyle operatorname int S cup T supseteq operatorname int S cup operatorname int T is guaranteed in general and equality might not hold For example if X R S 0 displaystyle X mathbb R S infty 0 and T 0 displaystyle T 0 infty then int S int T 0 0 R 0 displaystyle operatorname int S cup operatorname int T infty 0 cup 0 infty mathbb R setminus 0 is a proper subset of int S T int R R displaystyle operatorname int S cup T operatorname int mathbb R mathbb R Monotone nondecreasing with respect to displaystyle subseteq If S T displaystyle S subseteq T then int S int T displaystyle operatorname int S subseteq operatorname int T Other properties include If S displaystyle S is closed in X displaystyle X and int T displaystyle operatorname int T varnothing then int S T int S displaystyle operatorname int S cup T operatorname int S Relationship with closure The above statements will remain true if all instances of the symbols words interior int open subset and largest are respectively replaced by closure cl closed superset and smallest and the following symbols are swapped displaystyle subseteq swapped with displaystyle supseteq displaystyle cup swapped with displaystyle cap For more details on this matter see interior operator below or the article Kuratowski closure axioms Interior operatorThe interior operator intX displaystyle operatorname int X is dual to the closure operator which is denoted by clX displaystyle operatorname cl X or by an overline in the sense that intX S X X S displaystyle operatorname int X S X setminus overline X setminus S and also S X intX X S displaystyle overline S X setminus operatorname int X X setminus S where X displaystyle X is the topological space containing S displaystyle S and the backslash displaystyle setminus denotes set theoretic difference Therefore the abstract theory of closure operators and the Kuratowski closure axioms can be readily translated into the language of interior operators by replacing sets with their complements in X displaystyle X In general the interior operator does not commute with unions However in a complete metric space the following result does hold Theorem C Ursescu Let S1 S2 displaystyle S 1 S 2 ldots be a sequence of subsets of a complete metric space X displaystyle X If each Si displaystyle S i is closed in X displaystyle X then clX i NintX Si clX intX i NSi displaystyle operatorname cl X biggl bigcup i in mathbb N operatorname int X S i biggr operatorname cl X operatorname int X biggl bigcup i in mathbb N S i biggr If each Si displaystyle S i is open in X displaystyle X then intX i NclX Si intX clX i NSi displaystyle operatorname int X biggl bigcap i in mathbb N operatorname cl X S i biggr operatorname int X operatorname cl X biggl bigcap i in mathbb N S i biggr The result above implies that every complete metric space is a Baire space Exterior of a setThe exterior of a subset S displaystyle S of a topological space X displaystyle X denoted by extX S displaystyle operatorname ext X S or simply ext S displaystyle operatorname ext S is the largest open set disjoint from S displaystyle S namely it is the union of all open sets in X displaystyle X that are disjoint from S displaystyle S The exterior is the interior of the complement which is the same as the complement of the closure in formulas ext S int X S X S displaystyle operatorname ext S operatorname int X setminus S X setminus overline S Similarly the interior is the exterior of the complement int S ext X S displaystyle operatorname int S operatorname ext X setminus S The interior boundary and exterior of a set S displaystyle S together partition the whole space into three blocks or fewer when one or more of these is empty X int S S ext S displaystyle X operatorname int S cup partial S cup operatorname ext S where S displaystyle partial S denotes the boundary of S displaystyle S The interior and exterior are always open while the boundary is closed Some of the properties of the exterior operator are unlike those of the interior operator The exterior operator reverses inclusions if S T displaystyle S subseteq T then ext T ext S displaystyle operatorname ext T subseteq operatorname ext S The exterior operator is not idempotent It does have the property that int S ext ext S displaystyle operatorname int S subseteq operatorname ext left operatorname ext S right Interior disjoint shapesThe red shapes are not interior disjoint with the blue Triangle The green and the yellow shapes are interior disjoint with the blue Triangle but only the yellow shape is entirely disjoint from the blue Triangle Two shapes a displaystyle a and b displaystyle b are called interior disjoint if the intersection of their interiors is empty Interior disjoint shapes may or may not intersect in their boundary See alsoAlgebraic interior Generalization of topological interior DE 9IM Topological model Interior algebra Algebraic structure Jordan curve theorem A closed curve divides the plane into two regions Quasi relative interior Generalization of algebraic interior Relative interior Generalization of topological interiorReferencesZalinescu C 2002 Convex analysis in general vector spaces River Edge N J London World Scientific p 33 ISBN 981 238 067 1 OCLC 285163112 Bourbaki 1989 p 24 Bourbaki 1989 p 25 The analogous identity for the closure operator is cl S T cl S cl T displaystyle operatorname cl S cup T operatorname cl S cup operatorname cl T These identities may be remembered with the following mnemonic Just as the intersection displaystyle cap of two open sets is open so too does the interior operator distribute over intersections displaystyle cap explicitly int S T int S int T displaystyle operatorname int S cap T operatorname int S cap operatorname int T And similarly just as the union displaystyle cup of two closed sets is closed so too does the closure operator distribute over unions displaystyle cup explicitly cl S T cl S cl T displaystyle operatorname cl S cup T operatorname cl S cup operatorname cl T BibliographyBourbaki Nicolas 1989 1966 General Topology Chapters 1 4 Topologie Generale Elements de mathematique Berlin New York Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 978 3 540 64241 1 OCLC 18588129 Dixmier Jacques 1984 General Topology Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics Translated by Berberian S K New York Springer Verlag ISBN 978 0 387 90972 1 OCLC 10277303 Csaszar Akos 1978 General topology Translated by Csaszar Klara Bristol England Adam Hilger Ltd ISBN 0 85274 275 4 OCLC 4146011 Dugundji James 1966 Topology Boston Allyn and Bacon ISBN 978 0 697 06889 7 OCLC 395340485 1983 Introduction to General Topology New York John Wiley and Sons Ltd ISBN 978 0 85226 444 7 OCLC 9218750 Kelley John L 1975 1955 General Topology Graduate Texts in Mathematics Vol 27 2nd ed New York Springer Verlag ISBN 978 0 387 90125 1 OCLC 1365153 Munkres James R 2000 Topology 2nd ed Upper Saddle River NJ Prentice Hall Inc ISBN 978 0 13 181629 9 OCLC 42683260 Schubert Horst 1968 Topology London Macdonald amp Co ISBN 978 0 356 02077 8 OCLC 463753 Wilansky Albert 17 October 2008 1970 Topology for Analysis Mineola New York Dover Publications Inc ISBN 978 0 486 46903 4 OCLC 227923899 Willard Stephen 2004 1970 General Topology Mineola N Y Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 43479 7 OCLC 115240 External linksInterior at PlanetMath