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Baire space

In mathematics, a topological space is said to be a Baire space if countable unions of closed sets with empty interior also have empty interior.[1] According to the Baire category theorem, compact Hausdorff spaces and complete metric spaces are examples of Baire spaces. The Baire category theorem combined with the properties of Baire spaces has numerous applications in topology, geometry, and analysis, in particular functional analysis.[2][3] For more motivation and applications, see the article Baire category theorem. The current article focuses more on characterizations and basic properties of Baire spaces per se.

Bourbaki introduced the term "Baire space"[4][5] in honor of René Baire, who investigated the Baire category theorem in the context of Euclidean space in his 1899 thesis.[6]

Definition edit

The definition that follows is based on the notions of meagre (or first category) set (namely, a set that is a countable union of sets whose closure has empty interior) and nonmeagre (or second category) set (namely, a set that is not meagre). See the corresponding article for details.

A topological space   is called a Baire space if it satisfies any of the following equivalent conditions:[1][7][8]

  1. Every countable intersection of dense open sets is dense.
  2. Every countable union of closed sets with empty interior has empty interior.
  3. Every meagre set has empty interior.
  4. Every nonempty open set is nonmeagre.[note 1]
  5. Every comeagre set is dense.
  6. Whenever a countable union of closed sets has an interior point, at least one of the closed sets has an interior point.

The equivalence between these definitions is based on the associated properties of complementary subsets of   (that is, of a set   and of its complement  ) as given in the table below.

Property of a set Property of complement
open closed
comeagre meagre
dense has empty interior
has dense interior nowhere dense

Baire category theorem edit

The Baire category theorem gives sufficient conditions for a topological space to be a Baire space.

BCT1 shows that the following are Baire spaces:

BCT2 shows that the following are Baire spaces:

One should note however that there are plenty of spaces that are Baire spaces without satisfying the conditions of the Baire category theorem, as shown in the Examples section below.

Properties edit

  • Every nonempty Baire space is nonmeagre. In terms of countable intersections of dense open sets, being a Baire space is equivalent to such intersections being dense, while being a nonmeagre space is equivalent to the weaker condition that such intersections are nonempty.
  • Every open subspace of a Baire space is a Baire space.[12]
  • Every dense Gδ set in a Baire space is a Baire space.[13][14] The result need not hold if the Gδ set is not dense. See the Examples section.
  • Every comeagre set in a Baire space is a Baire space.[15]
  • A subset of a Baire space is comeagre if and only if it contains a dense Gδ set.[16]
  • A closed subspace of a Baire space need not be Baire. See the Examples section.
  • If a space contains a dense subspace that is Baire, it is also a Baire space.[17]
  • A space that is locally Baire, in the sense that each point has a neighborhood that is a Baire space, is a Baire space.[18][19]
  • Every topological sum of Baire spaces is Baire.[20]
  • The product of two Baire spaces is not necessarily Baire.[21][22]
  • An arbitrary product of complete metric spaces is Baire.[23]
  • Every locally compact sober space is a Baire space.[24]
  • Every finite topological space is a Baire space (because a finite space has only finitely many open sets and the intersection of two open dense sets is an open dense set[25]).
  • A topological vector space is a Baire space if and only if it is nonmeagre,[26] which happens if and only if every closed balanced absorbing subset has non-empty interior.[27]

Given a sequence of continuous functions   with pointwise limit   If   is a Baire space then the points where   is not continuous is a meagre set in   and the set of points where   is continuous is dense in   A special case of this is the uniform boundedness principle.

Examples edit

  • The empty space is a Baire space. It is the only space that is both Baire and meagre.
  • The space   of real numbers with the usual topology is a Baire space.
  • The space   of rational numbers (with the topology induced from  ) is not a Baire space, since it is meagre.
  • The space of irrational numbers (with the topology induced from  ) is a Baire space, since it is comeagre in  
  • The space   (with the topology induced from  ) is nonmeagre, but not Baire. There are several ways to see it is not Baire: for example because the subset   is comeagre but not dense; or because the nonempty subset   is open and meagre.
  • Similarly, the space   is not Baire. It is nonmeagre since   is an isolated point.

The following are examples of Baire spaces for which the Baire category theorem does not apply, because these spaces are not locally compact and not completely metrizable:

  • The Sorgenfrey line.[28]
  • The Sorgenfrey plane.[29]
  • The Niemytzki plane.[29]
  • The subspace of   consisting of the open upper half plane together with the rationals on the x-axis, namely,   is a Baire space,[30] because the open upper half plane is dense in   and completely metrizable, hence Baire. The space   is not locally compact and not completely metrizable. The set   is closed in  , but is not a Baire space. Since in a metric space closed sets are Gδ sets, this also shows that in general Gδ sets in a Baire space need not be Baire.

Algebraic varieties with the Zariski topology are Baire spaces. An example is the affine space   consisting of the set   of n-tuples of complex numbers, together with the topology whose closed sets are the vanishing sets of polynomials  

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ As explained in the meagre set article, for an open set, being nonmeagre in the whole space is equivalent to being nonmeagre in itself.
  1. ^ a b Munkres 2000, p. 295.
  2. ^ "Your favourite application of the Baire Category Theorem". Mathematics Stack Exchange.
  3. ^ "Classic applications of Baire category theorem". MathOverflow.
  4. ^ Engelking 1989, Historical notes, p. 199.
  5. ^ Bourbaki 1989, p. 192.
  6. ^ Baire, R. (1899). "Sur les fonctions de variables réelles". Annali di Matematica Pura ed Applicata. 3: 1–123.
  7. ^ Haworth & McCoy 1977, p. 11.
  8. ^ Narici & Beckenstein 2011, pp. 390–391.
  9. ^ a b Kelley 1975, Theorem 34, p. 200.
  10. ^ Schechter 1996, Theorem 20.16, p. 537.
  11. ^ Schechter 1996, Theorem 20.18, p. 538.
  12. ^ Haworth & McCoy 1977, Proposition 1.14.
  13. ^ Haworth & McCoy 1977, Proposition 1.23.
  14. ^ Ma, Dan (3 June 2012). "A Question About The Rational Numbers". Dan Ma's Topology Blog.Theorem 3
  15. ^ Haworth & McCoy 1977, Proposition 1.16.
  16. ^ Haworth & McCoy 1977, Proposition 1.17.
  17. ^ Haworth & McCoy 1977, Theorem 1.15.
  18. ^ Narici & Beckenstein 2011, Theorem 11.6.7, p. 391.
  19. ^ Haworth & McCoy 1977, Corollary 1.22.
  20. ^ Haworth & McCoy 1977, Proposition 1.20.
  21. ^ Oxtoby, J. (1961). "Cartesian products of Baire spaces" (PDF). Fundamenta Mathematicae. 49 (2): 157–166. doi:10.4064/fm-49-2-157-166.
  22. ^ Fleissner, W.; Kunen, K. (1978). "Barely Baire spaces" (PDF). Fundamenta Mathematicae. 101 (3): 229–240. doi:10.4064/fm-101-3-229-240.
  23. ^ Bourbaki 1989, Exercise 17, p. 254.
  24. ^ Gierz et al. 2003, Corollary I-3.40.9, p. 114.
  25. ^ "Intersection of two open dense sets is dense". Mathematics Stack Exchange.
  26. ^ Narici & Beckenstein 2011, Theorem 11.8.6, p. 396.
  27. ^ Wilansky 2013, p. 60.
  28. ^ "The Sorgenfrey line is a Baire Space". Mathematics Stack Exchange.
  29. ^ a b "The Sorgenfrey plane and the Niemytzki plane are Baire spaces". Mathematics Stack Exchange.
  30. ^ "Example of a Baire metric space which is not completely metrizable". Mathematics Stack Exchange.

References edit

External links edit

  • Encyclopaedia of Mathematics article on Baire space
  • Encyclopaedia of Mathematics article on Baire theorem

baire, space, concept, theory, theory, mathematics, topological, space, displaystyle, said, countable, unions, closed, sets, with, empty, interior, also, have, empty, interior, according, baire, category, theorem, compact, hausdorff, spaces, complete, metric, . For the concept in set theory see Baire space set theory In mathematics a topological space X displaystyle X is said to be a Baire space if countable unions of closed sets with empty interior also have empty interior 1 According to the Baire category theorem compact Hausdorff spaces and complete metric spaces are examples of Baire spaces The Baire category theorem combined with the properties of Baire spaces has numerous applications in topology geometry and analysis in particular functional analysis 2 3 For more motivation and applications see the article Baire category theorem The current article focuses more on characterizations and basic properties of Baire spaces per se Bourbaki introduced the term Baire space 4 5 in honor of Rene Baire who investigated the Baire category theorem in the context of Euclidean space R n displaystyle mathbb R n in his 1899 thesis 6 Contents 1 Definition 2 Baire category theorem 3 Properties 4 Examples 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksDefinition editThe definition that follows is based on the notions of meagre or first category set namely a set that is a countable union of sets whose closure has empty interior and nonmeagre or second category set namely a set that is not meagre See the corresponding article for details A topological space X displaystyle X nbsp is called a Baire space if it satisfies any of the following equivalent conditions 1 7 8 Every countable intersection of dense open sets is dense Every countable union of closed sets with empty interior has empty interior Every meagre set has empty interior Every nonempty open set is nonmeagre note 1 Every comeagre set is dense Whenever a countable union of closed sets has an interior point at least one of the closed sets has an interior point The equivalence between these definitions is based on the associated properties of complementary subsets of X displaystyle X nbsp that is of a set A X displaystyle A subseteq X nbsp and of its complement X A displaystyle X setminus A nbsp as given in the table below Property of a set Property of complement open closed comeagre meagre dense has empty interior has dense interior nowhere denseBaire category theorem editMain article Baire category theorem The Baire category theorem gives sufficient conditions for a topological space to be a Baire space BCT1 Every complete pseudometric space is a Baire space 9 10 In particular every completely metrizable topological space is a Baire space BCT2 Every locally compact regular space is a Baire space 9 11 In particular every locally compact Hausdorff space is a Baire space BCT1 shows that the following are Baire spaces The space R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp of real numbers The space of irrational numbers which is homeomorphic to the Baire space w w displaystyle omega omega nbsp of set theory Every Polish space BCT2 shows that the following are Baire spaces Every compact Hausdorff space for example the Cantor set or Cantor space Every manifold even if it is not paracompact hence not metrizable like the long line One should note however that there are plenty of spaces that are Baire spaces without satisfying the conditions of the Baire category theorem as shown in the Examples section below Properties editEvery nonempty Baire space is nonmeagre In terms of countable intersections of dense open sets being a Baire space is equivalent to such intersections being dense while being a nonmeagre space is equivalent to the weaker condition that such intersections are nonempty Every open subspace of a Baire space is a Baire space 12 Every dense Gd set in a Baire space is a Baire space 13 14 The result need not hold if the Gd set is not dense See the Examples section Every comeagre set in a Baire space is a Baire space 15 A subset of a Baire space is comeagre if and only if it contains a dense Gd set 16 A closed subspace of a Baire space need not be Baire See the Examples section If a space contains a dense subspace that is Baire it is also a Baire space 17 A space that is locally Baire in the sense that each point has a neighborhood that is a Baire space is a Baire space 18 19 Every topological sum of Baire spaces is Baire 20 The product of two Baire spaces is not necessarily Baire 21 22 An arbitrary product of complete metric spaces is Baire 23 Every locally compact sober space is a Baire space 24 Every finite topological space is a Baire space because a finite space has only finitely many open sets and the intersection of two open dense sets is an open dense set 25 A topological vector space is a Baire space if and only if it is nonmeagre 26 which happens if and only if every closed balanced absorbing subset has non empty interior 27 Given a sequence of continuous functions f n X Y displaystyle f n X to Y nbsp with pointwise limit f X Y displaystyle f X to Y nbsp If X displaystyle X nbsp is a Baire space then the points where f displaystyle f nbsp is not continuous is a meagre set in X displaystyle X nbsp and the set of points where f displaystyle f nbsp is continuous is dense in X displaystyle X nbsp A special case of this is the uniform boundedness principle Examples editThe empty space is a Baire space It is the only space that is both Baire and meagre The space R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp of real numbers with the usual topology is a Baire space The space Q displaystyle mathbb Q nbsp of rational numbers with the topology induced from R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp is not a Baire space since it is meagre The space of irrational numbers with the topology induced from R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp is a Baire space since it is comeagre in R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp The space X 0 1 2 3 Q displaystyle X 0 1 cup 2 3 cap mathbb Q nbsp with the topology induced from R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp is nonmeagre but not Baire There are several ways to see it is not Baire for example because the subset 0 1 displaystyle 0 1 nbsp is comeagre but not dense or because the nonempty subset 2 3 Q displaystyle 2 3 cap mathbb Q nbsp is open and meagre Similarly the space X 1 2 3 Q displaystyle X 1 cup 2 3 cap mathbb Q nbsp is not Baire It is nonmeagre since 1 displaystyle 1 nbsp is an isolated point The following are examples of Baire spaces for which the Baire category theorem does not apply because these spaces are not locally compact and not completely metrizable The Sorgenfrey line 28 The Sorgenfrey plane 29 The Niemytzki plane 29 The subspace of R 2 displaystyle mathbb R 2 nbsp consisting of the open upper half plane together with the rationals on the x axis namely X R 0 Q 0 displaystyle X mathbb R times 0 infty cup mathbb Q times 0 nbsp is a Baire space 30 because the open upper half plane is dense in X displaystyle X nbsp and completely metrizable hence Baire The space X displaystyle X nbsp is not locally compact and not completely metrizable The set Q 0 displaystyle mathbb Q times 0 nbsp is closed in X displaystyle X nbsp but is not a Baire space Since in a metric space closed sets are Gd sets this also shows that in general Gd sets in a Baire space need not be Baire Algebraic varieties with the Zariski topology are Baire spaces An example is the affine space A n displaystyle mathbb A n nbsp consisting of the set C n displaystyle mathbb C n nbsp of n tuples of complex numbers together with the topology whose closed sets are the vanishing sets of polynomials f C x 1 x n displaystyle f in mathbb C x 1 ldots x n nbsp See also editBanach Mazur game Barrelled space Type of topological vector space Blumberg theorem Any real function on R admits a continuous restriction on a dense subset of R Choquet game Property of Baire Difference of an open set by a meager set Webbed space Space where open mapping and closed graph theorems holdNotes edit As explained in the meagre set article for an open set being nonmeagre in the whole space is equivalent to being nonmeagre in itself a b Munkres 2000 p 295 Your favourite application of the Baire Category Theorem Mathematics Stack Exchange Classic applications of Baire category theorem MathOverflow Engelking 1989 Historical notes p 199 Bourbaki 1989 p 192 Baire R 1899 Sur les fonctions de variables reelles Annali di Matematica Pura ed Applicata 3 1 123 Haworth amp McCoy 1977 p 11 Narici amp Beckenstein 2011 pp 390 391 a b Kelley 1975 Theorem 34 p 200 Schechter 1996 Theorem 20 16 p 537 Schechter 1996 Theorem 20 18 p 538 Haworth amp McCoy 1977 Proposition 1 14 Haworth amp McCoy 1977 Proposition 1 23 Ma Dan 3 June 2012 A Question About The Rational Numbers Dan Ma s Topology Blog Theorem 3 Haworth amp McCoy 1977 Proposition 1 16 Haworth amp McCoy 1977 Proposition 1 17 Haworth amp McCoy 1977 Theorem 1 15 Narici amp Beckenstein 2011 Theorem 11 6 7 p 391 Haworth amp McCoy 1977 Corollary 1 22 Haworth amp McCoy 1977 Proposition 1 20 Oxtoby J 1961 Cartesian products of Baire spaces PDF Fundamenta Mathematicae 49 2 157 166 doi 10 4064 fm 49 2 157 166 Fleissner W Kunen K 1978 Barely Baire spaces PDF Fundamenta Mathematicae 101 3 229 240 doi 10 4064 fm 101 3 229 240 Bourbaki 1989 Exercise 17 p 254 Gierz et al 2003 Corollary I 3 40 9 p 114 Intersection of two open dense sets is dense Mathematics Stack Exchange Narici amp Beckenstein 2011 Theorem 11 8 6 p 396 Wilansky 2013 p 60 The Sorgenfrey line is a Baire Space Mathematics Stack Exchange a b The Sorgenfrey plane and the Niemytzki plane are Baire spaces Mathematics Stack Exchange Example of a Baire metric space which is not completely metrizable Mathematics Stack Exchange References editBourbaki Nicolas 1989 1967 General Topology 2 Chapters 5 10 Topologie Generale Elements de mathematique Vol 4 Berlin New York Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 978 3 540 64563 4 OCLC 246032063 Engelking Ryszard 1989 General Topology Heldermann Verlag Berlin ISBN 3 88538 006 4 Gierz G Hofmann K H Keimel K Lawson J D Mislove M W Scott D S 2003 Continuous Lattices and Domains Encyclopedia of Mathematics and its Applications Vol 93 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521803380 Haworth R C McCoy R A 1977 Baire Spaces Warszawa Instytut Matematyczny Polskiej Akademi Nauk Kelley John L 1975 General Topology Graduate Texts in Mathematics Vol 27 New York Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 978 0 387 90125 1 OCLC 338047 Munkres James R 2000 Topology Prentice Hall ISBN 0 13 181629 2 Narici Lawrence Beckenstein Edward 2011 Topological Vector Spaces Pure and applied mathematics Second ed Boca Raton FL CRC Press ISBN 978 1584888666 OCLC 144216834 Schechter Eric 1996 Handbook of Analysis and Its Foundations San Diego CA Academic Press ISBN 978 0 12 622760 4 OCLC 175294365 Wilansky Albert 2013 Modern Methods in Topological Vector Spaces Mineola New York Dover Publications Inc ISBN 978 0 486 49353 4 OCLC 849801114 External links editEncyclopaedia of Mathematics article on Baire space Encyclopaedia of Mathematics article on Baire theorem Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Baire space amp oldid 1191940623, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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