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Math4201 Topology I (Lecture 10)
Continuity
Continuous functions
Let X,Y be topological spaces and f:X\to Y. For any x\in X and any open neighborhood V of f(x) in Y, f^{-1}(V) contains an open neighborhood of x in X.
Lemma for continuous functions
Let f:X\to Y be a function, then:
A\subseteq Y:f^{-1}(A^c) = (f^{-1}(A))^c.\{A_\alpha\}_{\alpha\in I}\subseteq Y:f^{-1}(\bigcup_{\alpha\in I} A_\alpha) = \bigcup_{\alpha\in I} f^{-1}(A_\alpha).\{A_\alpha\}_{\alpha\in I}\subseteq Y:f^{-1}(\bigcap_{\alpha\in I} A_\alpha) = \bigcap_{\alpha\in I} f^{-1}(A_\alpha).
Proof
-
By definition of continuous functions,
\forall Vopen inY,f^{-1}(V)is open inX. -
It is sufficient to shoa that
x\in f^{-1}(\bigcup_{\alpha\in I} A_\alpha)if and only ifx\in \bigcup_{\alpha\in I} f^{-1}(A_\alpha).
This condition holds if and only if \exists \alpha\in I such that f(x)\in A_\alpha.
Which is equivalent to \exists \alpha\in I such that x\in f^{-1}(A_\alpha).
So x\in f^{-1}(\bigcup_{\alpha\in I} A_\alpha)
In particular, f^{-1}(\bigcup_{\alpha\in I} A_\alpha) = \bigcup_{\alpha\in I} f^{-1}(A_\alpha).
- Similar to 2 but use forall.
Properties of continuous functions
A function f:X\to Y is continuous if and only if:
f^{-1}(V)is open inXfor any open setV\subset Y.fis continuous at any pointx\in X.f^{-1}(C)is closed inXfor any closed setC\subset Y.- Assume
\mathcal{B}is a basis forY, thenf^{-1}(\mathcal{B})is open inXfor anyB\in \mathcal{B}. - For any
A\subseteq X,f(\overline{A})\subseteq \overline{f(A)}.
Proof
Showing $1\iff 3$:
Use the lemma for continuous functions (1)
Showing $1\iff 4$:
1 \implies 4:
Because any B\in \mathcal{B} is open in Y, so f^{-1}(B) is open in X.
4 \implies 1:
Let V\subset Y be an open set. Then there are basis elements \{B_\alpha\}_{\alpha\in I} such that V=\bigcup_{\alpha\in I} B_\alpha.
So f^{-1}(V) = f^{-1}(\bigcup_{\alpha\in I} B_\alpha) = \bigcup_{\alpha\in I} f^{-1}(B_\alpha) (by lemma (2)) is a union of open sets, so f^{-1}(V) is open in X.
Showing $1\implies 5$:
Take A\subseteq X and x\in \overline{A}. It suffices to show f(x) is an element of the closure of f(A). This is equivalent to say that any open neighborhood V of f(x) intersects f(A) has a non-trivial intersection with f(A).
For any such V, 1 implies that f^{-1}(V) is open in X. Moreover, x\in f^{-1}(V) because f(x)\in V.
This means that f^{-1}(V) is an open neighborhood of x. Since x\in \overline{A}, we have f^{-1}(V)\cap A\neq \emptyset and contains a point x'\in X.
So x'\in f^{-1}(V)\cap A, this implies that f(x')\in V and f(x')\in f(A), so f(x')\in V\cap f(A).
Note
This verifies our claim. Proof of
5\implies 1is similar and left as an exercise.
Example of property 5
Let X=(0,1)\cup (1,2) and Y=\mathbb{R} equipped with the subspace topology induced by the standard topology on \mathbb{R}.
Let f:X\to Y be the inclusion map, f(x)=x for all x\in X. This is continuous.
Let A=(0,1)\cup (1,2). Then \overline{A}=A. So f(\overline{A})=f(A)=(0,1)\cup (1,2).
However, \overline{f(A)}=\overline{(0,1)\cup (1,2)}=[0,2].
So f(\overline{A})\subsetneq \overline{f(A)}.
Definition of homeomorphism
A homeomorphism f:X\to Y is a continuous map of topological spaces that is a bijection and f^{-1}:Y\to X is also continuous.
Example of homeomorphism
Let X=\mathbb{R} and Y=\mathbb{R}+ with standard topology.
f:\mathbb{R}\to \mathbb{R}^+ be defined by f(x)=e^x is continuous and bijective.
f^{-1}:\mathbb{R}^+\to \mathbb{R} be defined by f^{-1}(y)=\ln(y) is continuous and homeomorphism.
Epsilon delta definition of continuity
Let f:\mathbb{R}\to \mathbb{R} be a continuous function where we use the standard topology on \mathbb{R}.
Then property 4 implies that for any open interval (a,b)\in \mathbb{R}, f^{-1}((a,b)) is open in \mathbb{R}.
Now take an arbitrary x\in \mathbb{R} and \epsilon > 0. In particular f^{-1}((f(x)-\epsilon, f(x)+\epsilon)) is an open set containing x.
In particular, there is an open interval (by the standard topology on \mathbb{R}) (c,d) such that x\in (c,d)\subseteq f^{-1}((f(x)-\epsilon, f(x)+\epsilon)).
Let \delta = \min\{x-c, d-x\}. Then (x-\delta, x+\delta)\subseteq (c,d)\subseteq f^{-1}((f(x)-\epsilon, f(x)+\epsilon)).
This says that if |y-x| < \delta, then |f(y)-f(x)| < \epsilon.