词条 | Connected space |
释义 |
| align = right | direction = vertical | width = 200 | image1 = Simply connected, connected, and non-connected spaces.svg | width1 = | alt1 = | caption1 = From top to bottom: red space A, pink space B, yellow space C and orange space D are all connected, whereas green space E (made of subsets E1, E2, E3, and E4) is not connected. Furthermore, A and B are also simply connected (genus 0), while C and D are not: C has genus 1 and D has genus 4. | image2 = | width2 = | alt2 = | caption2 = | header = Connected and disconnected subspaces of R² | header_align = | header_background = | footer = | footer_align = | footer_background = | background color = }} In topology and related branches of mathematics, a connected space is a topological space that cannot be represented as the union of two or more disjoint nonempty open subsets. Connectedness is one of the principal topological properties that are used to distinguish topological spaces. A subset of a topological space X is a connected set if it is a connected space when viewed as a subspace of X. Formal definitionA topological space X is said to be disconnected if it is the union of two disjoint nonempty open sets. Otherwise, X is said to be connected. A subset of a topological space is said to be connected if it is connected under its subspace topology. Some authors exclude the empty set (with its unique topology) as a connected space, but this article does not follow that practice. For a topological space X the following conditions are equivalent:
Connected componentsThe maximal connected subsets (ordered by inclusion) of a nonempty topological space are called the connected components of the space. The components of any topological space X form a partition of X: they are disjoint, nonempty, and their union is the whole space. Every component is a closed subset of the original space. It follows that, in the case where their number is finite, each component is also an open subset. However, if their number is infinite, this might not be the case; for instance, the connected components of the set of the rational numbers are the one-point sets (singletons), which are not open. Let be the connected component of x in a topological space X, and be the intersection of all clopen sets containing x (called quasi-component of x.) Then where the equality holds if X is compact Hausdorff or locally connected. Disconnected spacesA space in which all components are one-point sets is called totally disconnected. Related to this property, a space X is called totally separated if, for any two distinct elements x and y of X, there exist disjoint open sets U containing x and V containing y such that X is the union of U and V. Clearly, any totally separated space is totally disconnected, but the converse does not hold. For example take two copies of the rational numbers Q, and identify them at every point except zero. The resulting space, with the quotient topology, is totally disconnected. However, by considering the two copies of zero, one sees that the space is not totally separated. In fact, it is not even Hausdorff, and the condition of being totally separated is strictly stronger than the condition of being Hausdorff. Examples
An example of a space that is not connected is a plane with an infinite line deleted from it. Other examples of disconnected spaces (that is, spaces which are not connected) include the plane with an annulus removed, as well as the union of two disjoint closed disks, where all examples of this paragraph bear the subspace topology induced by two-dimensional Euclidean space. == Path connectedness == A path-connected space is a stronger notion of connectedness, requiring the structure of a path. A path from a point x to a point y in a topological space X is a continuous function ƒ from the unit interval [0,1] to X with ƒ(0) = x and ƒ(1) = y. A path-component of X is an equivalence class of X under the equivalence relation which makes x equivalent to y if there is a path from x to y. The space X is said to be path-connected (or pathwise connected or 0-connected) if there is exactly one path-component, i.e. if there is a path joining any two points in X. Again, many authors exclude the empty space. Every path-connected space is connected. The converse is not always true: examples of connected spaces that are not path-connected include the extended long line L* and the topologist's sine curve. Subsets of the real line R are connected if and only if they are path-connected; these subsets are the intervals of R. Also, open subsets of Rn or Cn are connected if and only if they are path-connected. Additionally, connectedness and path-connectedness are the same for finite topological spaces. == Arc connectedness == A space X is said to be arc-connected or arcwise connected if any two distinct points can be joined by an arc, that is a path ƒ which is a homeomorphism between the unit interval [0, 1] and its image ƒ([0, 1]). It can be shown any Hausdorff space which is path-connected is also arc-connected. An example of a space which is path-connected but not arc-connected is provided by adding a second copy 0' of 0 to the nonnegative real numbers [0, ∞). One endows this set with a partial order by specifying that 0'<a for any positive number a, but leaving 0 and 0' incomparable. One then endows this set with the order topology, that is, one takes the open intervals (a, b) = {x | a < x < b} and the half-open intervals [0, a) = {x | 0 ≤ x < a}, [0', a) = {x | 0' ≤ x < a} as a base for the topology. The resulting space is a T1 space but not a Hausdorff space. Clearly 0 and 0' can be connected by a path but not by an arc in this space. == Local connectedness == {{main|Locally connected space}}A topological space is said to be locally connected at a point x if every neighbourhood of x contains a connected open neighbourhood. It is locally connected if it has a base of connected sets. It can be shown that a space X is locally connected if and only if every component of every open set of X is open. The topologist's sine curve is an example of a connected space that is not locally connected. Similarly, a topological space is said to be {{visible anchor|locally path-connected}} if it has a base of path-connected sets. An open subset of a locally path-connected space is connected if and only if it is path-connected. This generalizes the earlier statement about Rn and Cn, each of which is locally path-connected. More generally, any topological manifold is locally path-connected. Neither local connectedness nor local path connectedness necessarily implies connectedness or path connectedness. For example, the space is locally connected and locally path connected but neither connected nor path connected. Set operationsThe intersection of connected sets is not necessarily connected. The union of connected sets is not necessarily connected. Consider a collection of connected sets whose union is . If {{mvar|X}} is disconnected and is a separation of {{mvar|X}} (with disjoint and open in {{mvar|X}}), then each must be entirely contained in either {{mvar|U}} or {{mvar|V}}, since otherwise, and (which are disjoint and open in ) would be a separation of , contradicting the assumption that it is connected. This means that, if the union {{mvar|X}} is disconnected, then the collection can be partitioned to two sub-collections, such that the unions of the sub-collections are disjoint and open in {{mvar|X}} (see picture). This implies that in several cases, a union of connected sets is necessarily connected. In particular:
The set difference of connected sets is not necessarily connected. However, if X ⊇ Y and their difference X \\ Y is disconnected (and thus can be written as a union of two open sets X{{sub|1}} and X{{sub|2}}), then the union of Y with each such component is connected (i.e. Y ∪ X{{sub|i}} is connected for all i). Proof:[4] By contradiction, suppose Y ∪ X{{sub|1}} is not connected. So it can be written as the union of two disjoint open sets, e.g. Y ∪ X{{sub|1}} = Z{{sub|1}} ∪ Z{{sub|2}}. Because Y is connected, it must be entirely contained in one of these components, say Z{{sub|1}}, and thus Z{{sub|2}} is contained in X{{sub|1}}. Now we know that: X = (Y ∪ X{{sub|1}}) ∪ X{{sub|2}} = (Z{{sub|1}} ∪ Z{{sub|2}}) ∪ X{{sub|2}} = (Z{{sub|1}} ∪ X{{sub|2}}) ∪ (Z{{sub|2}} ∩ X{{sub|1}}) The two sets in the last union are disjoint and open in X, so there is a separation of X, contradicting the fact that X is connected. Theorems
GraphsGraphs have path connected subsets, namely those subsets for which every pair of points has a path of edges joining them. But it is not always possible to find a topology on the set of points which induces the same connected sets. The 5-cycle graph (and any n-cycle with n > 3 odd) is one such example. As a consequence, a notion of connectedness can be formulated independently of the topology on a space. To wit, there is a category of connective spaces consisting of sets with collections of connected subsets satisfying connectivity axioms; their morphisms are those functions which map connected sets to connected sets {{harv|Muscat|Buhagiar|2006}}. Topological spaces and graphs are special cases of connective spaces; indeed, the finite connective spaces are precisely the finite graphs. However, every graph can be canonically made into a topological space, by treating vertices as points and edges as copies of the unit interval (see topological graph theory#Graphs as topological spaces). Then one can show that the graph is connected (in the graph theoretical sense) if and only if it is connected as a topological space. Stronger forms of connectednessThere are stronger forms of connectedness for topological spaces, for instance:
In general, note that any path connected space must be connected but there exist connected spaces that are not path connected. The deleted comb space furnishes such an example, as does the above-mentioned topologist's sine curve. See also{{Portal|Mathematics}}
References1. ^{{cite book|title=Introduction to Topology and Modern Analysis|author=George F. Simmons|publisher=McGraw Hill Book Company|year=1968|page=144|isbn=0-89874-551-9}} 2. ^Charles Weibel, The K-book: An introduction to algebraic K-theory 3. ^Credit: Saaqib Mahmuud and Henno Brandsma at Math StackExchange. 4. ^Credit: Marek at Math StackExchange Further reading{{refbegin}}
2 : General topology|Properties of topological spaces |
随便看 |
|
开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。