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Math4201 Topology I (Lecture 17)
Quotient topology
How can we define topologies on the space obtained points in a topological space?
Quotient map
Let (X,\mathcal{T}) be a topological space. X^* is a set and q:X\to X^* is a surjective map.
The quotient topology on X^* is defined as follows:
\mathcal{T}^* = \{U\subseteq X^*\mid q^{-1}(U)\in \mathcal{T}\}
U\subseteq X^* is open if and only if q^{-1}(U) is open in X.
In particular, q is continuous map.
Definition of quotient map
q:X\to X^* defined above is called a quotient map.
Definition of quotient space
(X^*,\mathcal{T}^*) is called the quotient space of X by q.
Typical way of constructing a surjective map
Equivalence relation
\sim is a subset of X\times X satisfying:
- reflexive:
\forall x\in X, x\sim x - symmetric:
\forall x,y\in X, x\sim y\implies y\sim x - transitive:
\forall x,y,z\in X, x\sim y\text{ and } y\sim z\implies x\sim z
Equivalence classes
Check equivalence relation.
For x\in X, the equivalence class of x is denoted as [x]\coloneqq \{y\in X\mid y\sim x\}.
X^* is the set of all equivalence classes on X.
q:X\to X^* is defined as q(x)=[x] will be a surjective map.
Example of surjective maps and their quotient spaces
Let X=\mathbb{R}^2 and (s,t)\sim (s',t') if and only if s-s' and t-t' are both integers.
This space as a topological space is homeomorphic to the torus.
Let X=\{(s,t)\in \mathbb{R}^2\mid s^2+t^2\leq 1\} and (s,t)\sim (s',t') if and only if s^2+t^2 and s'^2+t'^2. with subspace topology as a subspace of \mathbb{R}^2.
This space as a topological space is homeomorphic to the spherical shell S^2.
We will show that the quotient topology is a topology on X^*.
Proof
We need to show that the quotient topology is a topology on X^*.
\emptyset, X^*are open inX^*.
\emptyset, X^* are open in X^* because q^{-1}(\emptyset)=q^{-1}(X^*)=\emptyset and q^{-1}(X^*)=X are open in X.
\mathcal{T}^*is closed with respect to arbitrary unions.
q^{-1}(\bigcup_{\alpha \in I} U_\alpha)=\bigcup_{\alpha \in I} q^{-1}(U_\alpha)
\mathcal{T}^*is closed with respect to finite intersections.
q^{-1}(\bigcap_{\alpha \in I} U_\alpha)=\bigcap_{\alpha \in I} q^{-1}(U_\alpha)