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Boundary (topology)

In topology and mathematics in general, the boundary of a subset S of a topological space X is the set of points in the closure of S not belonging to the interior of S. An element of the boundary of S is called a boundary point of S. The term boundary operation refers to finding or taking the boundary of a set. Notations used for boundary of a set S include and .

A set (in light blue) and its boundary (in dark blue).

Some authors (for example Willard, in General Topology) use the term frontier instead of boundary in an attempt to avoid confusion with a different definition used in algebraic topology and the theory of manifolds. Despite widespread acceptance of the meaning of the terms boundary and frontier, they have sometimes been used to refer to other sets. For example, Metric Spaces by E. T. Copson uses the term boundary to refer to Hausdorff's border, which is defined as the intersection of a set with its boundary.[1] Hausdorff also introduced the term residue, which is defined as the intersection of a set with the closure of the border of its complement.[2]

Definitions edit

There are several equivalent definitions for the boundary of a subset   of a topological space   which will be denoted by     or simply   if   is understood:

  1. It is the closure of   minus the interior of   in  :
     
    where   denotes the closure of   in   and   denotes the topological interior of   in  
  2. It is the intersection of the closure of   with the closure of its complement:
     
  3. It is the set of points   such that every neighborhood of   contains at least one point of   and at least one point not of  :
     

A boundary point of a set is any element of that set's boundary. The boundary   defined above is sometimes called the set's topological boundary to distinguish it from other similarly named notions such as the boundary of a manifold with boundary or the boundary of a manifold with corners, to name just a few examples.

A connected component of the boundary of S is called a boundary component of S.

Properties edit

The closure of a set   equals the union of the set with its boundary:

 
where   denotes the closure of   in   A set is closed if and only if it contains its boundary, and open if and only if it is disjoint from its boundary. The boundary of a set is closed;[3] this follows from the formula   which expresses   as the intersection of two closed subsets of  

("Trichotomy") Given any subset   each point of   lies in exactly one of the three sets   and   Said differently,

 
and these three sets are pairwise disjoint. Consequently, if these set are not empty[note 1] then they form a partition of  

A point   is a boundary point of a set if and only if every neighborhood of   contains at least one point in the set and at least one point not in the set. The boundary of the interior of a set as well as the boundary of the closure of a set are both contained in the boundary of the set.

 
Conceptual Venn diagram showing the relationships among different points of a subset   of     = set of limit points of     set of boundary points of   area shaded green = set of interior points of   area shaded yellow = set of isolated points of   areas shaded black = empty sets. Every point of   is either an interior point or a boundary point. Also, every point of   is either an accumulation point or an isolated point. Likewise, every boundary point of   is either an accumulation point or an isolated point. Isolated points are always boundary points.

Examples edit

Characterizations and general examples edit

A set and its complement have the same boundary:

 

A set   is a dense open subset of   if and only if  

The interior of the boundary of a closed set is empty.[proof 1] Consequently, the interior of the boundary of the closure of a set is empty. The interior of the boundary of an open set is also empty.[proof 2] Consequently, the interior of the boundary of the interior of a set is empty. In particular, if   is a closed or open subset of   then there does not exist any nonempty subset   such that   is open in   This fact is important for the definition and use of nowhere dense subsets, meager subsets, and Baire spaces.

A set is the boundary of some open set if and only if it is closed and nowhere dense. The boundary of a set is empty if and only if the set is both closed and open (that is, a clopen set).

Concrete examples edit

 
Boundary of hyperbolic components of Mandelbrot set

Consider the real line   with the usual topology (that is, the topology whose basis sets are open intervals) and   the subset of rational numbers (whose topological interior in   is empty). Then

  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  

These last two examples illustrate the fact that the boundary of a dense set with empty interior is its closure. They also show that it is possible for the boundary   of a subset   to contain a non-empty open subset of  ; that is, for the interior of   in   to be non-empty. However, a closed subset's boundary always has an empty interior.

In the space of rational numbers with the usual topology (the subspace topology of  ), the boundary of   where   is irrational, is empty.

The boundary of a set is a topological notion and may change if one changes the topology. For example, given the usual topology on   the boundary of a closed disk   is the disk's surrounding circle:   If the disk is viewed as a set in   with its own usual topology, that is,   then the boundary of the disk is the disk itself:   If the disk is viewed as its own topological space (with the subspace topology of  ), then the boundary of the disk is empty.

Boundary of an open ball vs. its surrounding sphere edit

This example demonstrates that the topological boundary of an open ball of radius   is not necessarily equal to the corresponding sphere of radius   (centered at the same point); it also shows that the closure of an open ball of radius   is not necessarily equal to the closed ball of radius   (again centered at the same point). Denote the usual Euclidean metric on   by

 
which induces on   the usual Euclidean topology. Let   denote the union of the  -axis   with the unit circle
 
centered at the origin  ; that is,   which is a topological subspace of   whose topology is equal to that induced by the (restriction of) the metric   In particular, the sets   and   are all closed subsets of   and thus also closed subsets of its subspace   Henceforth, unless it clearly indicated otherwise, every open ball, closed ball, and sphere should be assumed to be centered at the origin   and moreover, only the metric space   will be considered (and not its superspace  ); this being a path-connected and locally path-connected complete metric space.

Denote the open ball of radius   in   by   so that when   then

 
is the open sub-interval of the  -axis strictly between   and   The unit sphere in   ("unit" meaning that its radius is  ) is
 
while the closed unit ball in   is the union of the open unit ball and the unit sphere centered at this same point:
 

However, the topological boundary   and topological closure   in   of the open unit ball   are:

 
In particular, the open unit ball's topological boundary   is a proper subset of the unit sphere   in   And the open unit ball's topological closure   is a proper subset of the closed unit ball   in   The point   for instance, cannot belong to   because there does not exist a sequence in   that converges to it; the same reasoning generalizes to also explain why no point in   outside of the closed sub-interval   belongs to   Because the topological boundary of the set   is always a subset of  's closure, it follows that   must also be a subset of  

In any metric space   the topological boundary in   of an open ball of radius   centered at a point   is always a subset of the sphere of radius   centered at that same point  ; that is,

 
always holds.

Moreover, the unit sphere in   contains   which is an open subset of  [proof 3] This shows, in particular, that the unit sphere   in   contains a non-empty open subset of  

Boundary of a boundary edit

For any set   where   denotes the superset with equality holding if and only if the boundary of   has no interior points, which will be the case for example if   is either closed or open. Since the boundary of a set is closed,   for any set   The boundary operator thus satisfies a weakened kind of idempotence.

In discussing boundaries of manifolds or simplexes and their simplicial complexes, one often meets the assertion that the boundary of the boundary is always empty. Indeed, the construction of the singular homology rests critically on this fact. The explanation for the apparent incongruity is that the topological boundary (the subject of this article) is a slightly different concept from the boundary of a manifold or of a simplicial complex. For example, the boundary of an open disk viewed as a manifold is empty, as is its topological boundary viewed as a subset of itself, while its topological boundary viewed as a subset of the real plane is the circle surrounding the disk. Conversely, the boundary of a closed disk viewed as a manifold is the bounding circle, as is its topological boundary viewed as a subset of the real plane, while its topological boundary viewed as a subset of itself is empty. In particular, the topological boundary depends on the ambient space, while the boundary of a manifold is invariant.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The condition that these sets be non-empty is needed because sets in a partition are by definition required to be non-empty.
  1. ^ Let   be a closed subset of   so that   and thus also   If   is an open subset of   such that   then   (because  ) so that   (because by definition,   is the largest open subset of   contained in  ). But   implies that   Thus   is simultaneously a subset of   and disjoint from   which is only possible if   Q.E.D.
  2. ^ Let   be an open subset of   so that   Let   so that   which implies that   If   then pick   so that   Because   is an open neighborhood of   in   and   the definition of the topological closure   implies that   which is a contradiction.   Alternatively, if   is open in   then   is closed in   so that by using the general formula   and the fact that the interior of the boundary of a closed set (such as  ) is empty, it follows that    
  3. ^ The  -axis   is closed in   because it is a product of two closed subsets of   Consequently,   is an open subset of   Because   has the subspace topology induced by   the intersection   is an open subset of    

Citations edit

  1. ^ Hausdorff, Felix (1914). Grundzüge der Mengenlehre. Leipzig: Veit. p. 214. ISBN 978-0-8284-0061-9. Reprinted by Chelsea in 1949.
  2. ^ Hausdorff, Felix (1914). Grundzüge der Mengenlehre. Leipzig: Veit. p. 281. ISBN 978-0-8284-0061-9. Reprinted by Chelsea in 1949.
  3. ^ Mendelson, Bert (1990) [1975]. Introduction to Topology (Third ed.). Dover. p. 86. ISBN 0-486-66352-3. Corollary 4.15 For each subset     is closed.

References edit

boundary, topology, this, article, about, boundaries, general, topology, confused, with, boundary, manifold, boundary, locally, closed, subset, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, hel. This article is about boundaries in general topology It is not to be confused with boundary of a manifold or boundary of a locally closed subset This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations March 2013 Learn how and when to remove this message In topology and mathematics in general the boundary of a subset S of a topological space X is the set of points in the closure of S not belonging to the interior of S An element of the boundary of S is called a boundary point of S The term boundary operation refers to finding or taking the boundary of a set Notations used for boundary of a set S include bd S fr S displaystyle operatorname bd S operatorname fr S and S displaystyle partial S A set in light blue and its boundary in dark blue Some authors for example Willard in General Topology use the term frontier instead of boundary in an attempt to avoid confusion with a different definition used in algebraic topology and the theory of manifolds Despite widespread acceptance of the meaning of the terms boundary and frontier they have sometimes been used to refer to other sets For example Metric Spaces by E T Copson uses the term boundary to refer to Hausdorff s border which is defined as the intersection of a set with its boundary 1 Hausdorff also introduced the term residue which is defined as the intersection of a set with the closure of the border of its complement 2 Contents 1 Definitions 2 Properties 3 Examples 3 1 Characterizations and general examples 3 2 Concrete examples 3 3 Boundary of an open ball vs its surrounding sphere 4 Boundary of a boundary 5 See also 6 Notes 7 Citations 8 ReferencesDefinitions editThere are several equivalent definitions for the boundary of a subset S X displaystyle S subseteq X nbsp of a topological space X displaystyle X nbsp which will be denoted by X S displaystyle partial X S nbsp Bd X S displaystyle operatorname Bd X S nbsp or simply S displaystyle partial S nbsp if X displaystyle X nbsp is understood It is the closure of S displaystyle S nbsp minus the interior of S displaystyle S nbsp in X displaystyle X nbsp S S int X S displaystyle partial S overline S setminus operatorname int X S nbsp where S cl X S displaystyle overline S operatorname cl X S nbsp denotes the closure of S displaystyle S nbsp in X displaystyle X nbsp and int X S displaystyle operatorname int X S nbsp denotes the topological interior of S displaystyle S nbsp in X displaystyle X nbsp It is the intersection of the closure of S displaystyle S nbsp with the closure of its complement S S X S displaystyle partial S overline S cap overline X setminus S nbsp It is the set of points p X displaystyle p in X nbsp such that every neighborhood of p displaystyle p nbsp contains at least one point of S displaystyle S nbsp and at least one point not of S displaystyle S nbsp S p X for every neighborhood O of p O S and O X S displaystyle partial S p in X text for every neighborhood O text of p O cap S neq varnothing text and O cap X setminus S neq varnothing nbsp A boundary point of a set is any element of that set s boundary The boundary X S displaystyle partial X S nbsp defined above is sometimes called the set s topological boundary to distinguish it from other similarly named notions such as the boundary of a manifold with boundary or the boundary of a manifold with corners to name just a few examples A connected component of the boundary of S is called a boundary component of S Properties editThe closure of a set S displaystyle S nbsp equals the union of the set with its boundary S S X S displaystyle overline S S cup partial X S nbsp where S cl X S displaystyle overline S operatorname cl X S nbsp denotes the closure of S displaystyle S nbsp in X displaystyle X nbsp A set is closed if and only if it contains its boundary and open if and only if it is disjoint from its boundary The boundary of a set is closed 3 this follows from the formula X S S X S displaystyle partial X S overline S cap overline X setminus S nbsp which expresses X S displaystyle partial X S nbsp as the intersection of two closed subsets of X displaystyle X nbsp Trichotomy Given any subset S X displaystyle S subseteq X nbsp each point of X displaystyle X nbsp lies in exactly one of the three sets int X S X S displaystyle operatorname int X S partial X S nbsp and int X X S displaystyle operatorname int X X setminus S nbsp Said differently X int X S X S int X X S displaystyle X left operatorname int X S right cup left partial X S right cup left operatorname int X X setminus S right nbsp and these three sets are pairwise disjoint Consequently if these set are not empty note 1 then they form a partition of X displaystyle X nbsp A point p X displaystyle p in X nbsp is a boundary point of a set if and only if every neighborhood of p displaystyle p nbsp contains at least one point in the set and at least one point not in the set The boundary of the interior of a set as well as the boundary of the closure of a set are both contained in the boundary of the set nbsp Conceptual Venn diagram showing the relationships among different points of a subset S displaystyle S nbsp of R n displaystyle mathbb R n nbsp A displaystyle A nbsp set of limit points of S displaystyle S nbsp B displaystyle B nbsp set of boundary points of S displaystyle S nbsp area shaded green set of interior points of S displaystyle S nbsp area shaded yellow set of isolated points of S displaystyle S nbsp areas shaded black empty sets Every point of S displaystyle S nbsp is either an interior point or a boundary point Also every point of S displaystyle S nbsp is either an accumulation point or an isolated point Likewise every boundary point of S displaystyle S nbsp is either an accumulation point or an isolated point Isolated points are always boundary points Examples editCharacterizations and general examples edit A set and its complement have the same boundary X S X X S displaystyle partial X S partial X X setminus S nbsp A set U displaystyle U nbsp is a dense open subset of X displaystyle X nbsp if and only if X U X U displaystyle partial X U X setminus U nbsp The interior of the boundary of a closed set is empty proof 1 Consequently the interior of the boundary of the closure of a set is empty The interior of the boundary of an open set is also empty proof 2 Consequently the interior of the boundary of the interior of a set is empty In particular if S X displaystyle S subseteq X nbsp is a closed or open subset of X displaystyle X nbsp then there does not exist any nonempty subset U X S displaystyle U subseteq partial X S nbsp such that U displaystyle U nbsp is open in X displaystyle X nbsp This fact is important for the definition and use of nowhere dense subsets meager subsets and Baire spaces A set is the boundary of some open set if and only if it is closed and nowhere dense The boundary of a set is empty if and only if the set is both closed and open that is a clopen set Concrete examples edit nbsp Boundary of hyperbolic components of Mandelbrot set Consider the real line R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp with the usual topology that is the topology whose basis sets are open intervals and Q displaystyle mathbb Q nbsp the subset of rational numbers whose topological interior in R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp is empty Then 0 5 0 5 0 5 0 5 0 5 displaystyle partial 0 5 partial 0 5 partial 0 5 partial 0 5 0 5 nbsp displaystyle partial varnothing varnothing nbsp Q R displaystyle partial mathbb Q mathbb R nbsp Q 0 1 0 1 displaystyle partial mathbb Q cap 0 1 0 1 nbsp These last two examples illustrate the fact that the boundary of a dense set with empty interior is its closure They also show that it is possible for the boundary S displaystyle partial S nbsp of a subset S displaystyle S nbsp to contain a non empty open subset of X R displaystyle X mathbb R nbsp that is for the interior of S displaystyle partial S nbsp in X displaystyle X nbsp to be non empty However a closed subset s boundary always has an empty interior In the space of rational numbers with the usual topology the subspace topology of R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp the boundary of a displaystyle infty a nbsp where a displaystyle a nbsp is irrational is empty The boundary of a set is a topological notion and may change if one changes the topology For example given the usual topology on R 2 displaystyle mathbb R 2 nbsp the boundary of a closed disk W x y x 2 y 2 1 displaystyle Omega left x y x 2 y 2 leq 1 right nbsp is the disk s surrounding circle W x y x 2 y 2 1 displaystyle partial Omega left x y x 2 y 2 1 right nbsp If the disk is viewed as a set in R 3 displaystyle mathbb R 3 nbsp with its own usual topology that is W x y 0 x 2 y 2 1 displaystyle Omega left x y 0 x 2 y 2 leq 1 right nbsp then the boundary of the disk is the disk itself W W displaystyle partial Omega Omega nbsp If the disk is viewed as its own topological space with the subspace topology of R 2 displaystyle mathbb R 2 nbsp then the boundary of the disk is empty Boundary of an open ball vs its surrounding sphere edit This example demonstrates that the topological boundary of an open ball of radius r gt 0 displaystyle r gt 0 nbsp is not necessarily equal to the corresponding sphere of radius r displaystyle r nbsp centered at the same point it also shows that the closure of an open ball of radius r gt 0 displaystyle r gt 0 nbsp is not necessarily equal to the closed ball of radius r displaystyle r nbsp again centered at the same point Denote the usual Euclidean metric on R 2 displaystyle mathbb R 2 nbsp byd a b x y x a 2 y b 2 displaystyle d a b x y sqrt x a 2 y b 2 nbsp which induces on R 2 displaystyle mathbb R 2 nbsp the usual Euclidean topology Let X R 2 displaystyle X subseteq mathbb R 2 nbsp denote the union of the y displaystyle y nbsp axis Y 0 R displaystyle Y 0 times mathbb R nbsp with the unit circle S 1 p R 2 d p 0 1 x y R 2 x 2 y 2 1 displaystyle S 1 left p in mathbb R 2 d p mathbf 0 1 right left x y in mathbb R 2 x 2 y 2 1 right nbsp centered at the origin 0 0 0 R 2 displaystyle mathbf 0 0 0 in mathbb R 2 nbsp that is X Y S 1 displaystyle X Y cup S 1 nbsp which is a topological subspace of R 2 displaystyle mathbb R 2 nbsp whose topology is equal to that induced by the restriction of the metric d displaystyle d nbsp In particular the sets Y S 1 Y S 1 0 1 displaystyle Y S 1 Y cap S 1 0 pm 1 nbsp and 0 1 1 displaystyle 0 times 1 1 nbsp are all closed subsets of R 2 displaystyle mathbb R 2 nbsp and thus also closed subsets of its subspace X displaystyle X nbsp Henceforth unless it clearly indicated otherwise every open ball closed ball and sphere should be assumed to be centered at the origin 0 0 0 displaystyle mathbf 0 0 0 nbsp and moreover only the metric space X d displaystyle X d nbsp will be considered and not its superspace R 2 d displaystyle mathbb R 2 d nbsp this being a path connected and locally path connected complete metric space Denote the open ball of radius r gt 0 displaystyle r gt 0 nbsp in X d displaystyle X d nbsp by B r p X d p 0 lt r displaystyle B r left p in X d p mathbf 0 lt r right nbsp so that when r 1 displaystyle r 1 nbsp thenB 1 0 1 1 displaystyle B 1 0 times 1 1 nbsp is the open sub interval of the y displaystyle y nbsp axis strictly between y 1 displaystyle y 1 nbsp and y 1 displaystyle y 1 nbsp The unit sphere in X d displaystyle X d nbsp unit meaning that its radius is r 1 displaystyle r 1 nbsp is p X d p 0 1 S 1 displaystyle left p in X d p mathbf 0 1 right S 1 nbsp while the closed unit ball in X d displaystyle X d nbsp is the union of the open unit ball and the unit sphere centered at this same point p X d p 0 1 S 1 0 1 1 displaystyle left p in X d p mathbf 0 leq 1 right S 1 cup left 0 times 1 1 right nbsp However the topological boundary X B 1 displaystyle partial X B 1 nbsp and topological closure cl X B 1 displaystyle operatorname cl X B 1 nbsp in X displaystyle X nbsp of the open unit ball B 1 displaystyle B 1 nbsp are X B 1 0 1 0 1 and cl X B 1 B 1 X B 1 B 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 displaystyle partial X B 1 0 1 0 1 quad text and quad operatorname cl X B 1 B 1 cup partial X B 1 B 1 cup 0 1 0 1 0 times 1 1 nbsp In particular the open unit ball s topological boundary X B 1 0 1 0 1 displaystyle partial X B 1 0 1 0 1 nbsp is a proper subset of the unit sphere p X d p 0 1 S 1 displaystyle left p in X d p mathbf 0 1 right S 1 nbsp in X d displaystyle X d nbsp And the open unit ball s topological closure cl X B 1 B 1 0 1 0 1 displaystyle operatorname cl X B 1 B 1 cup 0 1 0 1 nbsp is a proper subset of the closed unit ball p X d p 0 1 S 1 0 1 1 displaystyle left p in X d p mathbf 0 leq 1 right S 1 cup left 0 times 1 1 right nbsp in X d displaystyle X d nbsp The point 1 0 X displaystyle 1 0 in X nbsp for instance cannot belong to cl X B 1 displaystyle operatorname cl X B 1 nbsp because there does not exist a sequence in B 1 0 1 1 displaystyle B 1 0 times 1 1 nbsp that converges to it the same reasoning generalizes to also explain why no point in X displaystyle X nbsp outside of the closed sub interval 0 1 1 displaystyle 0 times 1 1 nbsp belongs to cl X B 1 displaystyle operatorname cl X B 1 nbsp Because the topological boundary of the set B 1 displaystyle B 1 nbsp is always a subset of B 1 displaystyle B 1 nbsp s closure it follows that X B 1 displaystyle partial X B 1 nbsp must also be a subset of 0 1 1 displaystyle 0 times 1 1 nbsp In any metric space M r displaystyle M rho nbsp the topological boundary in M displaystyle M nbsp of an open ball of radius r gt 0 displaystyle r gt 0 nbsp centered at a point c M displaystyle c in M nbsp is always a subset of the sphere of radius r displaystyle r nbsp centered at that same point c displaystyle c nbsp that is M m M r m c lt r m M r m c r displaystyle partial M left left m in M rho m c lt r right right subseteq left m in M rho m c r right nbsp always holds Moreover the unit sphere in X d displaystyle X d nbsp contains X Y S 1 0 1 displaystyle X setminus Y S 1 setminus 0 pm 1 nbsp which is an open subset of X displaystyle X nbsp proof 3 This shows in particular that the unit sphere p X d p 0 1 displaystyle left p in X d p mathbf 0 1 right nbsp in X d displaystyle X d nbsp contains a non empty open subset of X displaystyle X nbsp Boundary of a boundary editFor any set S S S displaystyle S partial S supseteq partial partial S nbsp where displaystyle supseteq nbsp denotes the superset with equality holding if and only if the boundary of S displaystyle S nbsp has no interior points which will be the case for example if S displaystyle S nbsp is either closed or open Since the boundary of a set is closed S S displaystyle partial partial S partial partial partial S nbsp for any set S displaystyle S nbsp The boundary operator thus satisfies a weakened kind of idempotence In discussing boundaries of manifolds or simplexes and their simplicial complexes one often meets the assertion that the boundary of the boundary is always empty Indeed the construction of the singular homology rests critically on this fact The explanation for the apparent incongruity is that the topological boundary the subject of this article is a slightly different concept from the boundary of a manifold or of a simplicial complex For example the boundary of an open disk viewed as a manifold is empty as is its topological boundary viewed as a subset of itself while its topological boundary viewed as a subset of the real plane is the circle surrounding the disk Conversely the boundary of a closed disk viewed as a manifold is the bounding circle as is its topological boundary viewed as a subset of the real plane while its topological boundary viewed as a subset of itself is empty In particular the topological boundary depends on the ambient space while the boundary of a manifold is invariant See also editSee the discussion of boundary in topological manifold for more details Boundary of a manifold Topological space that locally resembles Euclidean spacePages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Bounding point Mathematical concept related to subsets of vector spaces Closure topology All points and limit points in a subset of a topological space Exterior topology Largest open set disjoint from some given set Interior topology Largest open subset of some given set Nowhere dense set Mathematical set whose closure has empty interior Lebesgue s density theorem for measure theoretic characterization and properties of boundary Surface topology Two dimensional manifoldNotes edit The condition that these sets be non empty is needed because sets in a partition are by definition required to be non empty Let S displaystyle S nbsp be a closed subset of X displaystyle X nbsp so that S S displaystyle overline S S nbsp and thus also X S S int X S S int X S displaystyle partial X S overline S setminus operatorname int X S S setminus operatorname int X S nbsp If U displaystyle U nbsp is an open subset of X displaystyle X nbsp such that U X S displaystyle U subseteq partial X S nbsp then U S displaystyle U subseteq S nbsp because X S S displaystyle partial X S subseteq S nbsp so that U int X S displaystyle U subseteq operatorname int X S nbsp because by definition int X S displaystyle operatorname int X S nbsp is the largest open subset of X displaystyle X nbsp contained in S displaystyle S nbsp But U X S S int X S displaystyle U subseteq partial X S S setminus operatorname int X S nbsp implies that U int X S displaystyle U cap operatorname int X S varnothing nbsp Thus U displaystyle U nbsp is simultaneously a subset of int X S displaystyle operatorname int X S nbsp and disjoint from int X S displaystyle operatorname int X S nbsp which is only possible if U displaystyle U varnothing nbsp Q E D Let S displaystyle S nbsp be an open subset of X displaystyle X nbsp so that X S S int X S S S displaystyle partial X S overline S setminus operatorname int X S overline S setminus S nbsp Let U int X X S displaystyle U operatorname int X left partial X S right nbsp so that U int X X S X S S S displaystyle U operatorname int X left partial X S right subseteq partial X S overline S setminus S nbsp which implies that U S displaystyle U cap S varnothing nbsp If U displaystyle U neq varnothing nbsp then pick u U displaystyle u in U nbsp so that u U X S S displaystyle u in U subseteq partial X S subseteq overline S nbsp Because U displaystyle U nbsp is an open neighborhood of u displaystyle u nbsp in X displaystyle X nbsp and u S displaystyle u in overline S nbsp the definition of the topological closure S displaystyle overline S nbsp implies that U S displaystyle U cap S neq varnothing nbsp which is a contradiction displaystyle blacksquare nbsp Alternatively if S displaystyle S nbsp is open in X displaystyle X nbsp then X S displaystyle X setminus S nbsp is closed in X displaystyle X nbsp so that by using the general formula X S X X S displaystyle partial X S partial X X setminus S nbsp and the fact that the interior of the boundary of a closed set such as X S displaystyle X setminus S nbsp is empty it follows that int X X S int X X X S displaystyle operatorname int X partial X S operatorname int X partial X X setminus S varnothing nbsp displaystyle blacksquare nbsp The y displaystyle y nbsp axis Y 0 R displaystyle Y 0 times mathbb R nbsp is closed in R 2 displaystyle mathbb R 2 nbsp because it is a product of two closed subsets of R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp Consequently R 2 Y displaystyle mathbb R 2 setminus Y nbsp is an open subset of R 2 displaystyle mathbb R 2 nbsp Because X displaystyle X nbsp has the subspace topology induced by R 2 displaystyle mathbb R 2 nbsp the intersection X R 2 Y X Y displaystyle X cap left mathbb R 2 setminus Y right X setminus Y nbsp is an open subset of X displaystyle X nbsp displaystyle blacksquare nbsp Citations edit Hausdorff Felix 1914 Grundzuge der Mengenlehre Leipzig Veit p 214 ISBN 978 0 8284 0061 9 Reprinted by Chelsea in 1949 Hausdorff Felix 1914 Grundzuge der Mengenlehre Leipzig Veit p 281 ISBN 978 0 8284 0061 9 Reprinted by Chelsea in 1949 Mendelson Bert 1990 1975 Introduction to Topology Third ed Dover p 86 ISBN 0 486 66352 3 Corollary 4 15 For each subset A displaystyle A nbsp Bdry A displaystyle operatorname Bdry A nbsp is closed References editMunkres J R 2000 Topology Prentice Hall ISBN 0 13 181629 2 Willard S 1970 General Topology Addison Wesley ISBN 0 201 08707 3 van den Dries L 1998 Tame Topology ISBN 978 0521598385 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Boundary topology amp oldid 1188172092, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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