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Math4201 Lecture 16 (Topology I)

Continuous maps

The following maps are continuous:


F_+:\mathbb{R}\times \mathbb{R}\to \mathbb{R}, (x,y)\to x+y

F_-:\mathbb{R}\times \mathbb{R}\to \mathbb{R}, (x,y)\to x-y

F_\times:\mathbb{R}\times \mathbb{R}\to \mathbb{R}, (x,y)\to x\times y

F_\div:\mathbb{R}\times (\mathbb{R}\setminus \{0\})\to \mathbb{R}, (x,y)\to \frac{x}{y}

Composition of continuous functions is continuous

Let f,g:X\to \mathbb{R} be continuous functions. X is topological space.

Then the following functions are continuous:


H:X\to \mathbb{R}\times \mathbb{R}, x\to (f(x),g(x))

Since the composition of continuous functions is continuous, we have


F_+\circ H:X\to \mathbb{R}, x\to f(x)+g(x)

F_-\circ H:X\to \mathbb{R}, x\to f(x)-g(x)

F_\times\circ H:X\to \mathbb{R}, x\to f(x)\times g(x)

are all continuous.

More over, if g(x)\neq 0 for all x\in X, then


F_\div\circ H:X\to \mathbb{R}, x\to \frac{f(x)}{g(x)}

is continuous following the similar argument.

Defining metric for functions

Definition of bounded metric space

A metric space (Y,d) is bounded if there is M\in\mathbb{R}^{\geq 0} such that


\forall y,y'\in Y, d(y,y')<M
Example of bounded metric space

If (Y,d) is a bounded metric space, let M be a positive constant, then \overline{d}=\min\{M,d\} is a bounded metric space.

In fact, the metric topology by d and \overline{d} are the same. (proved in homeworks)

Let X be a topological space. and (Y,d) be a bounded metric space.


\operatorname{Map}(X,Y)\coloneq \{f:X\to Y|f \text{ is a map}\}

Define \rho:\operatorname{Map}(X,Y)\times \operatorname{Map}(X,Y)\to \mathbb{R} by


\rho(f,g)=\sup_{x\in X} d(f(x),g(x))

Lemma space of map with metric defined is a metric space

(\operatorname{Map}(X,Y),\rho) is a metric space.

Proof

Proof is similar to showing that the square metric is a metric on \mathbb{R}^n.

\rho(f,g)=0\implies \sup_{x\in X}(d(f(x),g(x)))=0

Since d(f(x),g(x))\geq 0, this implies that d(f(x),g(x))=0 for all x\in X.

The triangle inequality of being metric for \rho follows from the similar properties for d.

Lemma continuous maps form a closed subset of the space of maps

Let (\operatorname{Map}(X,Y),\rho) be a metric space defined before.

and


Z=\{f:X\to Y|f \text{ is a continuous map}\}

Then Z is a closed subset of (\operatorname{Map}(X,Y),\rho).

Proof

We need to show that \overline{Z}=Z.

Since \operatorname{Map}(X,Y) is a metric space, this is equivalent to showing that: f_n:X\to Y\in Z continuous,

Which is to prove the uniform convergence,


f_n \to f \in \operatorname{Map}(X,Y)

Then we want to show that f is continuous.

Let B_r(y) be an arbitrary ball in Y, it suffices to show that f^{-1}(B_r(y)) is open in X.

Take N to be large enough such that for n\geq N, we have


\rho(f_n(x), f(x)) < \frac{r}{3}

In particular, this holds for n=N. So we have


d(f_N(x), f(x)) < \frac{r}{3},\forall x\in X

Take x_0\in f^{-1}(B_r(y)), we'd like to show that there is an open ball around x_0 in f^{-1}(B_r(y)).

Since f_N is continuous, f^{-1}_N(B_{\frac{r}{3}}(y)) is open in X.

d(f(x_0), f(x_0))<\frac{r}{3}

continue the proof in bonus video