Metric and Hilbert Spaces

Arun Ram
Department of Mathematics and Statistics
University of Melbourne
Parkville, VIC 3010 Australia
aram@unimelb.edu.au

Last updated: 4 November 2014

Lecture 19: Hausdorff, normal and path connected

A Hausdorff topological space is a topological space (X,𝒯) such that if x1,x2X and x1x2 then there exist U1,U2𝒯 such that x1U1, x2U2 and U1U2=.

A normal topological space is a topological space (X,𝒯) such that if C1,C2 are closed sets in X and C1C2= then there exist U1,U2𝒯 such that C1U1, C2U2 and U1U2=.

HW: If X is a Hausdorff topological space and AX then Ais cover compactAis closed.

HW: If X is a compact Hausdorff topological space then X is normal.

A topological space (X,𝒯) is path connected if X satisfies: if p,qX then there exists a continuous function f:[0,1]X with f(0)=p and f(1)=q.

HW: Show that if X is path connected then X is connected.

HW: Show that the graph of f(x)= { sin(1x), ifx(0,1], 0, ifx=0 is a connected set which is not path connected.

One point compactification

A topological space X is locally compact if X is Hausdorff and if xX then there exists N𝒩(x) such that N is compact.

HW: Show that is locally compact but is not compact.

Let X be locally compact. The one point compactification of X is X=X{ω} with topology 𝒯=𝒯 { (X-K){ω} |KXand Kis compact } .

Compactness and closedness

HW: Let (X,d) be a metric space and let YX.

(a) Show that if X is compact and Y is closed then Y is compact.
(b) Show that if Y is compact then Y is closed.

Closed and bounded compact.

Let X=C([0,1];) with metric given by d(f,g)=sup {f(x)-g(x)|x[0,1]}. Let E=B(0,1)={fX|d(f,0)1}.
Since d is continuous then E is closed.
Since EB(0,2) then E is bounded.
Let fn:[0,1] be given by fn(x)=xn.
The pointwise limit of f1,f2, is f:[0,1] given by f(x)= { 0, ifx1, 1, ifx=1. Since fn-f=1 for n>0, limn d(fn,f)= limn fn-f= limn1=1. So f1,f2, does not have a convergent subsequence.

Examples of completions

The completion of is .

The completion of is p.

The completion of [X] is [[X]].

The completion of (X) is ((X)).

Notes and References

These are a typed copy of Lecture 19 from a series of handwritten lecture notes for the class Metric and Hilbert Spaces given on August 28, 2014.

page history