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Topological group

In mathematics, topological groups are logically the combination of groups and topological spaces, i.e. they are groups and topological spaces at the same time, such that the continuity condition for the group operations connects these two structures together and consequently they are not independent from each other.[1]

The real numbers form a topological group under addition

Topological groups have been studied extensively in the period of 1925 to 1940. Haar and Weil (respectively in 1933 and 1940) showed that the integrals and Fourier series are special cases of a very wide class of topological groups.[2]

Topological groups, along with continuous group actions, are used to study continuous symmetries, which have many applications, for example, in physics. In functional analysis, every topological vector space is an additive topological group with the additional property that scalar multiplication is continuous; consequently, many results from the theory of topological groups can be applied to functional analysis.

Formal definition

A topological group, G, is a topological space that is also a group such that the group operation (in this case product):

⋅ : G × GG, (x, y) ↦ xy

and the inversion map:

−1 : GG, xx−1

are continuous.[note 1] Here G × G is viewed as a topological space with the product topology. Such a topology is said to be compatible with the group operations and is called a group topology.

Checking continuity

The product map is continuous if and only if for any x, yG and any neighborhood W of xy in G, there exist neighborhoods U of x and V of y in G such that UVW, where UV := {uv : uU, vV}. The inversion map is continuous if and only if for any xG and any neighborhood V of x−1 in G, there exists a neighborhood U of x in G such that U−1V, where U−1 := { u−1 : uU }.

To show that a topology is compatible with the group operations, it suffices to check that the map

G × GG, (x, y) ↦ xy−1

is continuous. Explicitly, this means that for any x, yG and any neighborhood W in G of xy−1, there exist neighborhoods U of x and V of y in G such that U ⋅ (V−1) ⊆ W.

Additive notation

This definition used notation for multiplicative groups; the equivalent for additive groups would be that the following two operations are continuous:

+ : G × GG , (x, y) ↦ x + y
− : GG , x ↦ −x.
Hausdorffness

Although not part of this definition, many authors[3] require that the topology on G be Hausdorff. One reason for this is that any topological group can be canonically associated with a Hausdorff topological group by taking an appropriate canonical quotient; this however, often still requires working with the original non-Hausdorff topological group. Other reasons, and some equivalent conditions, are discussed below.

This article will not assume that topological groups are necessarily Hausdorff.

Category

In the language of category theory, topological groups can be defined concisely as group objects in the category of topological spaces, in the same way that ordinary groups are group objects in the category of sets. Note that the axioms are given in terms of the maps (binary product, unary inverse, and nullary identity), hence are categorical definitions.

Homomorphisms

A homomorphism of topological groups means a continuous group homomorphism GH. Topological groups, together with their homomorphisms, form a category. A group homomorphism between topological groups is continuous if and only if it is continuous at some point.[4]

An isomorphism of topological groups is a group isomorphism that is also a homeomorphism of the underlying topological spaces. This is stronger than simply requiring a continuous group isomorphism—the inverse must also be continuous. There are examples of topological groups that are isomorphic as ordinary groups but not as topological groups. Indeed, any non-discrete topological group is also a topological group when considered with the discrete topology. The underlying groups are the same, but as topological groups there is not an isomorphism.

Examples

Every group can be trivially made into a topological group by considering it with the discrete topology; such groups are called discrete groups. In this sense, the theory of topological groups subsumes that of ordinary groups. The indiscrete topology (i.e. the trivial topology) also makes every group into a topological group.

The real numbers,   with the usual topology form a topological group under addition. Euclidean n-space  n is also a topological group under addition, and more generally, every topological vector space forms an (abelian) topological group. Some other examples of abelian topological groups are the circle group S1, or the torus (S1)n for any natural number n.

The classical groups are important examples of non-abelian topological groups. For instance, the general linear group GL(n, ) of all invertible n-by-n matrices with real entries can be viewed as a topological group with the topology defined by viewing GL(n, ) as a subspace of Euclidean space  n×n. Another classical group is the orthogonal group O(n), the group of all linear maps from  n to itself that preserve the length of all vectors. The orthogonal group is compact as a topological space. Much of Euclidean geometry can be viewed as studying the structure of the orthogonal group, or the closely related group O(n) ⋉  n of isometries of  n.

The groups mentioned so far are all Lie groups, meaning that they are smooth manifolds in such a way that the group operations are smooth, not just continuous. Lie groups are the best-understood topological groups; many questions about Lie groups can be converted to purely algebraic questions about Lie algebras and then solved.

An example of a topological group that is not a Lie group is the additive group   of rational numbers, with the topology inherited from  . This is a countable space, and it does not have the discrete topology. An important example for number theory is the group  p of p-adic integers, for a prime number p, meaning the inverse limit of the finite groups  /pn as n goes to infinity. The group  p is well behaved in that it is compact (in fact, homeomorphic to the Cantor set), but it differs from (real) Lie groups in that it is totally disconnected. More generally, there is a theory of p-adic Lie groups, including compact groups such as GL(n, p) as well as locally compact groups such as GL(n, p), where  p is the locally compact field of p-adic numbers.

The group  p is a pro-finite group; it is isomorphic to a subgroup of the product   in such a way that its topology is induced by the product topology, where the finite groups   are given the discrete topology. Another large class of pro-finite groups important in number theory are absolute Galois groups.

Some topological groups can be viewed as infinite dimensional Lie groups; this phrase is best understood informally, to include several different families of examples. For example, a topological vector space, such as a Banach space or Hilbert space, is an abelian topological group under addition. Some other infinite-dimensional groups that have been studied, with varying degrees of success, are loop groups, Kac–Moody groups, diffeomorphism groups, homeomorphism groups, and gauge groups.

In every Banach algebra with multiplicative identity, the set of invertible elements forms a topological group under multiplication. For example, the group of invertible bounded operators on a Hilbert space arises this way.

Properties

Translation invariance

Every topological group's topology is translation invariant, which by definition means that if for any   left or right multiplication by this element yields a homeomorphism   Consequently, for any   and   the subset   is open (resp. closed) in   if and only if this is true of its left translation   and right translation   If   is a neighborhood basis of the identity element in a topological group   then for all     is a neighborhood basis of   in  [4] In particular, any group topology on a topological group is completely determined by any neighborhood basis at the identity element. If   is any subset of   and   is an open subset of   then   is an open subset of  [4]

Symmetric neighborhoods

The inversion operation   on a topological group   is a homeomorphism from   to itself.

A subset   is said to be symmetric if   where   The closure of every symmetric set in a commutative topological group is symmetric.[4] If S is any subset of a commutative topological group G, then the following sets are also symmetric: S−1S, S−1S, and S−1 S.[4]

For any neighborhood N in a commutative topological group G of the identity element, there exists a symmetric neighborhood M of the identity element such that M−1 MN, where note that M−1 M is necessarily a symmetric neighborhood of the identity element.[4] Thus every topological group has a neighborhood basis at the identity element consisting of symmetric sets.

If G is a locally compact commutative group, then for any neighborhood N in G of the identity element, there exists a symmetric relatively compact neighborhood M of the identity element such that cl MN (where cl M is symmetric as well).[4]

Uniform space

Every topological group can be viewed as a uniform space in two ways; the left uniformity turns all left multiplications into uniformly continuous maps while the right uniformity turns all right multiplications into uniformly continuous maps.[5] If G is not abelian, then these two need not coincide. The uniform structures allow one to talk about notions such as completeness, uniform continuity and uniform convergence on topological groups.

Separation properties

If U is an open subset of a commutative topological group G and U contains a compact set K, then there exists a neighborhood N of the identity element such that KNU.[4]

As a uniform space, every commutative topological group is completely regular. Consequently, for a multiplicative topological group G with identity element 1, the following are equivalent:[4]

  1. G is a T0-space (Kolmogorov);
  2. G is a T2-space (Hausdorff);
  3. G is a T312 (Tychonoff);
  4. { 1 } is closed in G;
  5. { 1 } := N ∈ 𝒩 N, where 𝒩 is a neighborhood basis of the identity element in G;
  6. for any   such that   there exists a neighborhood U in G of the identity element such that  

A subgroup of a commutative topological group is discrete if and only if it has an isolated point.[4]

If G is not Hausdorff, then one can obtain a Hausdorff group by passing to the quotient group G/K, where K is the closure of the identity.[6] This is equivalent to taking the Kolmogorov quotient of G.

Metrisability

Let G be a topological group. As with any topological space, we say that G is metrisable if and only if there exists a metric d on G, which induces the same topology on  . A metric d on G is called

  • left-invariant (resp. right-invariant) if and only if  (resp.  ) for all   (equivalently,   is left-invariant just in case the map   is an isometry from   to itself for each  ).
  • proper if and only if all open balls,   for  , are pre-compact.

The Birkhoff–Kakutani theorem (named after mathematicians Garrett Birkhoff and Shizuo Kakutani) states that the following three conditions on a topological group G are equivalent:[7]

  1. G is first countable (equivalently: the identity element 1 is closed in G, and there is a countable basis of neighborhoods for 1 in G).
  2. G is metrisable (as a topological space).
  3. There is a left-invariant metric on G that induces the given topology on G.

Furthermore, the following are equivalent for any topological group G:

  1. G is a second countable locally compact (Hausdorff) space.
  2. G is a Polish, locally compact (Hausdorff) space.
  3. G is properly metrisable (as a topological space).
  4. There is a left-invariant, proper metric on G that induces the given topology on G.

Note: As with the rest of the article we of assume here a Hausdorff topology. The implications 4   3   2   1 hold in any topological space. In particular 3   2 holds, since in particular any properly metrisable space is countable union of compact metrisable and thus separable (cf. properties of compact metric spaces) subsets. The non-trivial implication 1   4 was first proved by Raimond Struble in 1974.[8] An alternative approach was made by Uffe Haagerup and Agata Przybyszewska in 2006,[9] the idea of the which is as follows: One relies on the construction of a left-invariant metric,  , as in the case of first countable spaces. By local compactness, closed balls of sufficiently small radii are compact, and by normalising we can assume this holds for radius 1. Closing the open ball, U, of radius 1 under multiplication yields a clopen subgroup, H, of G, on which the metric   is proper. Since H is open and G is second countable, the subgroup has at most countably many cosets. One now uses this sequence of cosets and the metric on H to construct a proper metric on G.

Subgroups

Every subgroup of a topological group is itself a topological group when given the subspace topology. Every open subgroup H is also closed in G, since the complement of H is the open set given by the union of open sets gH for gG \ H. If H is a subgroup of G then the closure of H is also a subgroup. Likewise, if H is a normal subgroup of G, the closure of H is normal in G.

Quotients and normal subgroups

If H is a subgroup of G, the set of left cosets G/H with the quotient topology is called a homogeneous space for G. The quotient map   is always open. For example, for a positive integer n, the sphere Sn is a homogeneous space for the rotation group SO(n+1) in  n+1, with Sn = SO(n+1)/SO(n). A homogeneous space G/H is Hausdorff if and only if H is closed in G.[10] Partly for this reason, it is natural to concentrate on closed subgroups when studying topological groups.

If H is a normal subgroup of G, then the quotient group G/H becomes a topological group when given the quotient topology. It is Hausdorff if and only if H is closed in G. For example, the quotient group   is isomorphic to the circle group S1.

In any topological group, the identity component (i.e., the connected component containing the identity element) is a closed normal subgroup. If C is the identity component and a is any point of G, then the left coset aC is the component of G containing a. So the collection of all left cosets (or right cosets) of C in G is equal to the collection of all components of G. It follows that the quotient group G/C is totally disconnected.[11]

Closure and compactness

In any commutative topological group, the product (assuming the group is multiplicative) KC of a compact set K and a closed set C is a closed set.[4] Furthermore, for any subsets R and S of G, (cl R)(cl S) ⊆ cl (RS).[4]

If H is a subgroup of a commutative topological group G and if N is a neighborhood in G of the identity element such that H ∩ cl N is closed, then H is closed.[4] Every discrete subgroup of a Hausdorff commutative topological group is closed.[4]

Isomorphism theorems

The isomorphism theorems from ordinary group theory are not always true in the topological setting. This is because a bijective homomorphism need not be an isomorphism of topological groups.

For example, a native version of the first isomorphism theorem is false for topological groups: if   is a morphism of topological groups (that is, a continuous homomorphism), it is not necessarily true that the induced homomorphism   is an isomorphism of topological groups; it will be a bijective, continuous homomorphism, but it will not necessarily be a homeomorphism. In other words, it will not necessarily admit an inverse in the category of topological groups.

There is a version of the first isomorphism theorem for topological groups, which may be stated as follows: if   is a continuous homomorphism, then the induced homomorphism from G/ker(f) to im(f) is an isomorphism if and only if the map f is open onto its image.[12]

The third isomorphism theorem, however, is true more or less verbatim for topological groups, as one may easily check.

Hilbert's fifth problem

There are several strong results on the relation between topological groups and Lie groups. First, every continuous homomorphism of Lie groups   is smooth. It follows that a topological group has a unique structure of a Lie group if one exists. Also, Cartan's theorem says that every closed subgroup of a Lie group is a Lie subgroup, in particular a smooth submanifold.

Hilbert's fifth problem asked whether a topological group G that is a topological manifold must be a Lie group. In other words, does G have the structure of a smooth manifold, making the group operations smooth? As shown by Andrew Gleason, Deane Montgomery, and Leo Zippin, the answer to this problem is yes.[13] In fact, G has a real analytic structure. Using the smooth structure, one can define the Lie algebra of G, an object of linear algebra that determines a connected group G up to covering spaces. As a result, the solution to Hilbert's fifth problem reduces the classification of topological groups that are topological manifolds to an algebraic problem, albeit a complicated problem in general.

The theorem also has consequences for broader classes of topological groups. First, every compact group (understood to be Hausdorff) is an inverse limit of compact Lie groups. (One important case is an inverse limit of finite groups, called a profinite group. For example, the group  p of p-adic integers and the absolute Galois group of a field are profinite groups.) Furthermore, every connected locally compact group is an inverse limit of connected Lie groups.[14] At the other extreme, a totally disconnected locally compact group always contains a compact open subgroup, which is necessarily a profinite group.[15] (For example, the locally compact group GL(n, p) contains the compact open subgroup GL(n, p), which is the inverse limit of the finite groups GL(n, /pr) as r' goes to infinity.)

Representations of compact or locally compact groups

An action of a topological group G on a topological space X is a group action of G on X such that the corresponding function G × XX is continuous. Likewise, a representation of a topological group G on a real or complex topological vector space V is a continuous action of G on V such that for each gG, the map vgv from V to itself is linear.

Group actions and representation theory are particularly well understood for compact groups, generalizing what happens for finite groups. For example, every finite-dimensional (real or complex) representation of a compact group is a direct sum of irreducible representations. An infinite-dimensional unitary representation of a compact group can be decomposed as a Hilbert-space direct sum of irreducible representations, which are all finite-dimensional; this is part of the Peter–Weyl theorem.[16] For example, the theory of Fourier series describes the decomposition of the unitary representation of the circle group S1 on the complex Hilbert space L2(S1). The irreducible representations of S1 are all 1-dimensional, of the form zzn for integers n (where S1 is viewed as a subgroup of the multiplicative group  *). Each of these representations occurs with multiplicity 1 in L2(S1).

The irreducible representations of all compact connected Lie groups have been classified. In particular, the character of each irreducible representation is given by the Weyl character formula.

More generally, locally compact groups have a rich theory of harmonic analysis, because they admit a natural notion of measure and integral, given by the Haar measure. Every unitary representation of a locally compact group can be described as a direct integral of irreducible unitary representations. (The decomposition is essentially unique if G is of Type I, which includes the most important examples such as abelian groups and semisimple Lie groups.[17]) A basic example is the Fourier transform, which decomposes the action of the additive group   on the Hilbert space L2( ) as a direct integral of the irreducible unitary representations of  . The irreducible unitary representations of   are all 1-dimensional, of the form xeiax for a .

The irreducible unitary representations of a locally compact group may be infinite-dimensional. A major goal of representation theory, related to the Langlands classification of admissible representations, is to find the unitary dual (the space of all irreducible unitary representations) for the semisimple Lie groups. The unitary dual is known in many cases such as SL(2, ), but not all.

For a locally compact abelian group G, every irreducible unitary representation has dimension 1. In this case, the unitary dual   is a group, in fact another locally compact abelian group. Pontryagin duality states that for a locally compact abelian group G, the dual of   is the original group G. For example, the dual group of the integers   is the circle group S1, while the group   of real numbers is isomorphic to its own dual.

Every locally compact group G has a good supply of irreducible unitary representations; for example, enough representations to distinguish the points of G (the Gelfand–Raikov theorem). By contrast, representation theory for topological groups that are not locally compact has so far been developed only in special situations, and it may not be reasonable to expect a general theory. For example, there are many abelian Banach–Lie groups for which every representation on Hilbert space is trivial.[18]

Homotopy theory of topological groups

Topological groups are special among all topological spaces, even in terms of their homotopy type. One basic point is that a topological group G determines a path-connected topological space, the classifying space BG (which classifies principal G-bundles over topological spaces, under mild hypotheses). The group G is isomorphic in the homotopy category to the loop space of BG; that implies various restrictions on the homotopy type of G.[19] Some of these restrictions hold in the broader context of H-spaces.

For example, the fundamental group of a topological group G is abelian. (More generally, the Whitehead product on the homotopy groups of G is zero.) Also, for any field k, the cohomology ring H*(G,k) has the structure of a Hopf algebra. In view of structure theorems on Hopf algebras by Heinz Hopf and Armand Borel, this puts strong restrictions on the possible cohomology rings of topological groups. In particular, if G is a path-connected topological group whose rational cohomology ring H*(G, ) is finite-dimensional in each degree, then this ring must be a free graded-commutative algebra over  , that is, the tensor product of a polynomial ring on generators of even degree with an exterior algebra on generators of odd degree.[20]

In particular, for a connected Lie group G, the rational cohomology ring of G is an exterior algebra on generators of odd degree. Moreover, a connected Lie group G has a maximal compact subgroup K, which is unique up to conjugation, and the inclusion of K into G is a homotopy equivalence. So describing the homotopy types of Lie groups reduces to the case of compact Lie groups. For example, the maximal compact subgroup of SL(2, ) is the circle group SO(2), and the homogeneous space SL(2, )/SO(2) can be identified with the hyperbolic plane. Since the hyperbolic plane is contractible, the inclusion of the circle group into SL(2, ) is a homotopy equivalence.

Finally, compact connected Lie groups have been classified by Wilhelm Killing, Élie Cartan, and Hermann Weyl. As a result, there is an essentially complete description of the possible homotopy types of Lie groups. For example, a compact connected Lie group of dimension at most 3 is either a torus, the group SU(2) (diffeomorphic to the 3-sphere S3), or its quotient group SU(2)/{±1} ≅ SO(3) (diffeomorphic to RP3).

Complete topological group

Information about convergence of nets and filters, such as definitions and properties, can be found in the article about filters in topology.

Canonical uniformity on a commutative topological group

This article will henceforth assume that any topological group that we consider is an additive commutative topological group with identity element  

The diagonal of   is the set

 
and for any   containing   the canonical entourage or canonical vicinities around   is the set
 

For a topological group   the canonical uniformity[21] on   is the uniform structure induced by the set of all canonical entourages   as   ranges over all neighborhoods of   in  

That is, it is the upward closure of the following prefilter on  

 
where this prefilter forms what is known as a base of entourages of the canonical uniformity.

For a commutative additive group   a fundamental system of entourages   is called a translation-invariant uniformity if for every     if and only if   for all   A uniformity   is called translation-invariant if it has a base of entourages that is translation-invariant.[22]

  • The canonical uniformity on any commutative topological group is translation-invariant.
  • The same canonical uniformity would result by using a neighborhood basis of the origin rather the filter of all neighborhoods of the origin.
  • Every entourage   contains the diagonal   because  
  • If   is symmetric (that is,  ) then   is symmetric (meaning that  ) and  
  • The topology induced on   by the canonical uniformity is the same as the topology that   started with (that is, it is  ).

Cauchy prefilters and nets

The general theory of uniform spaces has its own definition of a "Cauchy prefilter" and "Cauchy net." For the canonical uniformity on   these reduces down to the definition described below.

Suppose   is a net in   and   is a net in   Make   into a directed set by declaring   if and only if   Then[23]   denotes the product net. If   then the image of this net under the addition map   denotes the sum of these two nets:

 
and similarly their difference is defined to be the image of the product net under the subtraction map:
 

A net   in an additive topological group   is called a Cauchy net if[24]

 
or equivalently, if for every neighborhood   of   in   there exists some   such that   for all indices  

A Cauchy sequence is a Cauchy net that is a sequence.

If   is a subset of an additive group   and   is a set containing   then  is said to be an  -small set or small of order   if  [25]

A prefilter   on an additive topological group   called a Cauchy prefilter if it satisfies any of the following equivalent conditions:

  1.   in   where   is a prefilter.
  2.   in   where   is a prefilter equivalent to  
  3. For every neighborhood   of   in     contains some  -small set (that is, there exists some   such that  ).[25]

and if   is commutative then also:

  1. For every neighborhood   of   in   there exists some   and some   such that  [25]
  • It suffices to check any of the above condition for any given neighborhood basis of   in  

Suppose   is a prefilter on a commutative topological group   and   Then   in   if and only if   and   is Cauchy.[23]

Complete commutative topological group

Recall that for any   a prefilter   on   is necessarily a subset of  ; that is,  

A subset   of a topological group   is called a complete subset if it satisfies any of the following equivalent conditions:

  1. Every Cauchy prefilter   on   converges to at least one point of  
    • If   is Hausdorff then every prefilter on   will converge to at most one point of   But if   is not Hausdorff then a prefilter may converge to multiple points in   The same is true for nets.
  2. Every Cauchy net in   converges to at least one point of  ;
  3. Every Cauchy filter   on   converges to at least one point of  
  4.   is a complete uniform space (under the point-set topology definition of "complete uniform space") when   is endowed with the uniformity induced on it by the canonical uniformity of  ;

A subset   is called a sequentially complete subset if every Cauchy sequence in   (or equivalently, every elementary Cauchy filter/prefilter on  ) converges to at least one point of  

  • Importantly, convergence outside of   is allowed: If   is not Hausdorff and if every Cauchy prefilter on   converges to some point of   then   will be complete even if some or all Cauchy prefilters on   also converge to points(s) in the complement   In short, there is no requirement that these Cauchy prefilters on   converge only to points in   The same can be said of the convergence of Cauchy nets in  
    • As a consequence, if a commutative topological group   is not Hausdorff, then every subset of the closure of   say   is complete (since it is clearly compact and every compact set is necessarily complete). So in particular, if   (for example, if   a is singleton set such as  ) then   would be complete even though every Cauchy net in   (and every Cauchy prefilter on  ), converges to every point in   (include those points in   that are not in  ).
    • This example also shows that complete subsets (indeed, even compact subsets) of a non-Hausdorff space may fail to be closed (for example, if   then   is closed if and only if  ).

A commutative topological group   is called a complete group if any of the following equivalent conditions hold:

  1.   is complete as a subset of itself.
  2. Every Cauchy net in   converges to at least one point of  
  3. There exists a neighborhood of   in   that is also a complete subset of  [25]
    • This implies that every locally compact commutative topological group is complete.
  4. When endowed with its canonical uniformity,   becomes is a complete uniform space.
    • In the general theory of uniform spaces, a uniform space is called a complete uniform space if each Cauchy filter in   converges in   to some point of  

A topological group is called sequentially complete if it is a sequentially complete subset of itself.

Neighborhood basis: Suppose   is a completion of a commutative topological group   with   and that   is a neighborhood base of the origin in   Then the family of sets

 
is a neighborhood basis at the origin in  [23]

Uniform continuity

Let   and   be topological groups,   and   be a map. Then   is uniformly continuous if for every neighborhood   of the origin in   there exists a neighborhood   of the origin in   such that for all   if   then  

Generalizations

Various generalizations of topological groups can be obtained by weakening the continuity conditions:[26]

  • A semitopological group is a group G with a topology such that for each cG the two functions GG defined by xxc and xcx are continuous.
  • A quasitopological group is a semitopological group in which the function mapping elements to their inverses is also continuous.
  • A paratopological group is a group with a topology such that the group operation is continuous.

See also

  • Algebraic group – Algebraic variety with a group structure
  • Complete field – Algebraic structure that is complete relative to a metric
  • Compact group – Topological group with compact topology
  • Complete topological vector space – A TVS where points that get progressively closer to each other will always converge to a point
  • Lie group – Group that is also a differentiable manifold with group operations that are smooth
  • Locally compact field
  • Locally compact group – topological group G for which the underlying topology is locally compact and Hausdorff, so that the Haar measure can be defined
  • Locally compact quantum group – relatively new C*-algebraic approach toward quantum groups
  • Profinite group – topological group that is isomorphic to the inverse (projective) limit of an inverse system of discrete finite groups
  • Ordered topological vector space
  • Topological abelian group – concept in mathematics
  • Topological field – Algebraic structure with addition, multiplication, and division
  • Topological module
  • Topological ring – ring where ring operations are continuous
  • Topological semigroup – semigroup with continuous operation
  • Topological vector space – Vector space with a notion of nearness

Notes

  1. ^ i.e. Continuous means that for any open set UG, f−1(U) is open in the domain dom f of f.

Citations

  1. ^ Pontrjagin 1946, p. 52.
  2. ^ Hewitt & Ross 1979, p. 1.
  3. ^ Armstrong 1997, p. 73; Bredon 1997, p. 51
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Narici & Beckenstein 2011, pp. 19–45.
  5. ^ Bourbaki 1998, section III.3.
  6. ^ Bourbaki 1998, section III.2.7.
  7. ^ Montgomery & Zippin 1955, section 1.22.
  8. ^ Struble, Raimond A. (1974). "Metrics in locally compact groups". Compositio Mathematica. 28 (3): 217–222.
  9. ^ Haagerup, Uffe; Przybyszewska, Agata (2006), Proper metrics on locally compact groups, and proper affine isometric actions on, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.236.827
  10. ^ Bourbaki 1998, section III.2.5.
  11. ^ Bourbaki 1998, section I.11.5.
  12. ^ Bourbaki 1998, section III.2.8.
  13. ^ Montgomery & Zippin 1955, section 4.10.
  14. ^ Montgomery & Zippin 1955, section 4.6.
  15. ^ Bourbaki 1998, section III.4.6.
  16. ^ Hewitt & Ross 1970, Theorem 27.40.
  17. ^ Mackey 1976, section 2.4.
  18. ^ Banaszczyk 1983.
  19. ^ Hatcher 2001, Theorem 4.66.
  20. ^ Hatcher 2001, Theorem 3C.4.
  21. ^ Edwards 1995, p. 61.
  22. ^ Schaefer & Wolff 1999, pp. 12–19.
  23. ^ a b c Narici & Beckenstein 2011, pp. 47–66.
  24. ^ Narici & Beckenstein 2011, p. 48.
  25. ^ a b c d Narici & Beckenstein 2011, pp. 48–51.
  26. ^ Arhangel'skii & Tkachenko 2008, p. 12.

References

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In mathematics topological groups are logically the combination of groups and topological spaces i e they are groups and topological spaces at the same time such that the continuity condition for the group operations connects these two structures together and consequently they are not independent from each other 1 The real numbers form a topological group under addition Topological groups have been studied extensively in the period of 1925 to 1940 Haar and Weil respectively in 1933 and 1940 showed that the integrals and Fourier series are special cases of a very wide class of topological groups 2 Topological groups along with continuous group actions are used to study continuous symmetries which have many applications for example in physics In functional analysis every topological vector space is an additive topological group with the additional property that scalar multiplication is continuous consequently many results from the theory of topological groups can be applied to functional analysis Contents 1 Formal definition 1 1 Homomorphisms 2 Examples 3 Properties 3 1 Translation invariance 3 2 Symmetric neighborhoods 3 3 Uniform space 3 4 Separation properties 3 5 Metrisability 3 6 Subgroups 3 7 Quotients and normal subgroups 3 8 Closure and compactness 3 9 Isomorphism theorems 4 Hilbert s fifth problem 5 Representations of compact or locally compact groups 6 Homotopy theory of topological groups 7 Complete topological group 7 1 Canonical uniformity on a commutative topological group 7 2 Cauchy prefilters and nets 7 3 Complete commutative topological group 8 Generalizations 9 See also 10 Notes 11 Citations 12 ReferencesFormal definition EditA topological group G is a topological space that is also a group such that the group operation in this case product G G G x y xyand the inversion map 1 G G x x 1are continuous note 1 Here G G is viewed as a topological space with the product topology Such a topology is said to be compatible with the group operations and is called a group topology Checking continuityThe product map is continuous if and only if for any x y G and any neighborhood W of xy in G there exist neighborhoods U of x and V of y in G such that U V W where U V u v u U v V The inversion map is continuous if and only if for any x G and any neighborhood V of x 1 in G there exists a neighborhood U of x in G such that U 1 V where U 1 u 1 u U To show that a topology is compatible with the group operations it suffices to check that the map G G G x y xy 1is continuous Explicitly this means that for any x y G and any neighborhood W in G of xy 1 there exist neighborhoods U of x and V of y in G such that U V 1 W Additive notationThis definition used notation for multiplicative groups the equivalent for additive groups would be that the following two operations are continuous G G G x y x y G G x x HausdorffnessAlthough not part of this definition many authors 3 require that the topology on G be Hausdorff One reason for this is that any topological group can be canonically associated with a Hausdorff topological group by taking an appropriate canonical quotient this however often still requires working with the original non Hausdorff topological group Other reasons and some equivalent conditions are discussed below This article will not assume that topological groups are necessarily Hausdorff CategoryIn the language of category theory topological groups can be defined concisely as group objects in the category of topological spaces in the same way that ordinary groups are group objects in the category of sets Note that the axioms are given in terms of the maps binary product unary inverse and nullary identity hence are categorical definitions Homomorphisms Edit A homomorphism of topological groups means a continuous group homomorphism G H Topological groups together with their homomorphisms form a category A group homomorphism between topological groups is continuous if and only if it is continuous at some point 4 An isomorphism of topological groups is a group isomorphism that is also a homeomorphism of the underlying topological spaces This is stronger than simply requiring a continuous group isomorphism the inverse must also be continuous There are examples of topological groups that are isomorphic as ordinary groups but not as topological groups Indeed any non discrete topological group is also a topological group when considered with the discrete topology The underlying groups are the same but as topological groups there is not an isomorphism Examples EditEvery group can be trivially made into a topological group by considering it with the discrete topology such groups are called discrete groups In this sense the theory of topological groups subsumes that of ordinary groups The indiscrete topology i e the trivial topology also makes every group into a topological group The real numbers R displaystyle mathbb R with the usual topology form a topological group under addition Euclidean n space R displaystyle mathbb R n is also a topological group under addition and more generally every topological vector space forms an abelian topological group Some other examples of abelian topological groups are the circle group S1 or the torus S1 n for any natural number n The classical groups are important examples of non abelian topological groups For instance the general linear group GL n R displaystyle mathbb R of all invertible n by n matrices with real entries can be viewed as a topological group with the topology defined by viewing GL n R displaystyle mathbb R as a subspace of Euclidean space R displaystyle mathbb R n n Another classical group is the orthogonal group O n the group of all linear maps from R displaystyle mathbb R n to itself that preserve the length of all vectors The orthogonal group is compact as a topological space Much of Euclidean geometry can be viewed as studying the structure of the orthogonal group or the closely related group O n R displaystyle mathbb R n of isometries of R displaystyle mathbb R n The groups mentioned so far are all Lie groups meaning that they are smooth manifolds in such a way that the group operations are smooth not just continuous Lie groups are the best understood topological groups many questions about Lie groups can be converted to purely algebraic questions about Lie algebras and then solved An example of a topological group that is not a Lie group is the additive group Q displaystyle mathbb Q of rational numbers with the topology inherited from R displaystyle mathbb R This is a countable space and it does not have the discrete topology An important example for number theory is the group Z displaystyle mathbb Z p of p adic integers for a prime number p meaning the inverse limit of the finite groups Z displaystyle mathbb Z pn as n goes to infinity The group Z displaystyle mathbb Z p is well behaved in that it is compact in fact homeomorphic to the Cantor set but it differs from real Lie groups in that it is totally disconnected More generally there is a theory of p adic Lie groups including compact groups such as GL n Z displaystyle mathbb Z p as well as locally compact groups such as GL n Q displaystyle mathbb Q p where Q displaystyle mathbb Q p is the locally compact field of p adic numbers The group Z displaystyle mathbb Z p is a pro finite group it is isomorphic to a subgroup of the product n 1 Z p n displaystyle prod n geq 1 mathbb Z p n in such a way that its topology is induced by the product topology where the finite groups Z p n displaystyle mathbb Z p n are given the discrete topology Another large class of pro finite groups important in number theory are absolute Galois groups Some topological groups can be viewed as infinite dimensional Lie groups this phrase is best understood informally to include several different families of examples For example a topological vector space such as a Banach space or Hilbert space is an abelian topological group under addition Some other infinite dimensional groups that have been studied with varying degrees of success are loop groups Kac Moody groups diffeomorphism groups homeomorphism groups and gauge groups In every Banach algebra with multiplicative identity the set of invertible elements forms a topological group under multiplication For example the group of invertible bounded operators on a Hilbert space arises this way Properties EditTranslation invariance Edit Every topological group s topology is translation invariant which by definition means that if for any a G displaystyle a in G left or right multiplication by this element yields a homeomorphism G G displaystyle G to G Consequently for any a G displaystyle a in G and S G displaystyle S subseteq G the subset S displaystyle S is open resp closed in G displaystyle G if and only if this is true of its left translation a S a s s S displaystyle aS as s in S and right translation S a s a s S displaystyle Sa sa s in S If N displaystyle mathcal N is a neighborhood basis of the identity element in a topological group G displaystyle G then for all x X displaystyle x in X x N x N N N displaystyle x mathcal N xN N in mathcal N is a neighborhood basis of x displaystyle x in G displaystyle G 4 In particular any group topology on a topological group is completely determined by any neighborhood basis at the identity element If S displaystyle S is any subset of G displaystyle G and U displaystyle U is an open subset of G displaystyle G then S U s u s S u U displaystyle SU su s in S u in U is an open subset of G displaystyle G 4 Symmetric neighborhoods Edit The inversion operation g g 1 displaystyle g mapsto g 1 on a topological group G displaystyle G is a homeomorphism from G displaystyle G to itself A subset S G displaystyle S subseteq G is said to be symmetric if S 1 S displaystyle S 1 S where S 1 s 1 s S displaystyle S 1 left s 1 s in S right The closure of every symmetric set in a commutative topological group is symmetric 4 If S is any subset of a commutative topological group G then the following sets are also symmetric S 1 S S 1 S and S 1 S 4 For any neighborhood N in a commutative topological group G of the identity element there exists a symmetric neighborhood M of the identity element such that M 1 M N where note that M 1 M is necessarily a symmetric neighborhood of the identity element 4 Thus every topological group has a neighborhood basis at the identity element consisting of symmetric sets If G is a locally compact commutative group then for any neighborhood N in G of the identity element there exists a symmetric relatively compact neighborhood M of the identity element such that cl M N where cl M is symmetric as well 4 Uniform space Edit Every topological group can be viewed as a uniform space in two ways the left uniformity turns all left multiplications into uniformly continuous maps while the right uniformity turns all right multiplications into uniformly continuous maps 5 If G is not abelian then these two need not coincide The uniform structures allow one to talk about notions such as completeness uniform continuity and uniform convergence on topological groups Separation properties Edit If U is an open subset of a commutative topological group G and U contains a compact set K then there exists a neighborhood N of the identity element such that KN U 4 As a uniform space every commutative topological group is completely regular Consequently for a multiplicative topological group G with identity element 1 the following are equivalent 4 G is a T0 space Kolmogorov G is a T2 space Hausdorff G is a T31 2 Tychonoff 1 is closed in G 1 N 𝒩 N where 𝒩 is a neighborhood basis of the identity element in G for any x G displaystyle x in G such that x 1 displaystyle x neq 1 there exists a neighborhood U in G of the identity element such that x U displaystyle x not in U A subgroup of a commutative topological group is discrete if and only if it has an isolated point 4 If G is not Hausdorff then one can obtain a Hausdorff group by passing to the quotient group G K where K is the closure of the identity 6 This is equivalent to taking the Kolmogorov quotient of G Metrisability Edit Let G be a topological group As with any topological space we say that G is metrisable if and only if there exists a metric d on G which induces the same topology on G displaystyle G A metric d on G is called left invariant resp right invariant if and only if d a x 1 a x 2 d x 1 x 2 displaystyle d ax 1 ax 2 d x 1 x 2 resp d x 1 a x 2 a d x 1 x 2 displaystyle d x 1 a x 2 a d x 1 x 2 for all a x 1 x 2 G displaystyle a x 1 x 2 in G equivalently d displaystyle d is left invariant just in case the map x a x displaystyle x mapsto ax is an isometry from G d displaystyle G d to itself for each a G displaystyle a in G proper if and only if all open balls B r g G d g 1 lt r displaystyle B r g in G mid d g 1 lt r for r gt 0 displaystyle r gt 0 are pre compact The Birkhoff Kakutani theorem named after mathematicians Garrett Birkhoff and Shizuo Kakutani states that the following three conditions on a topological group G are equivalent 7 G is first countable equivalently the identity element 1 is closed in G and there is a countable basis of neighborhoods for 1 in G G is metrisable as a topological space There is a left invariant metric on G that induces the given topology on G Furthermore the following are equivalent for any topological group G G is a second countable locally compact Hausdorff space G is a Polish locally compact Hausdorff space G is properly metrisable as a topological space There is a left invariant proper metric on G that induces the given topology on G Note As with the rest of the article we of assume here a Hausdorff topology The implications 4 displaystyle Rightarrow 3 displaystyle Rightarrow 2 displaystyle Rightarrow 1 hold in any topological space In particular 3 displaystyle Rightarrow 2 holds since in particular any properly metrisable space is countable union of compact metrisable and thus separable cf properties of compact metric spaces subsets The non trivial implication 1 displaystyle Rightarrow 4 was first proved by Raimond Struble in 1974 8 An alternative approach was made by Uffe Haagerup and Agata Przybyszewska in 2006 9 the idea of the which is as follows One relies on the construction of a left invariant metric d 0 displaystyle d 0 as in the case of first countable spaces By local compactness closed balls of sufficiently small radii are compact and by normalising we can assume this holds for radius 1 Closing the open ball U of radius 1 under multiplication yields a clopen subgroup H of G on which the metric d 0 displaystyle d 0 is proper Since H is open and G is second countable the subgroup has at most countably many cosets One now uses this sequence of cosets and the metric on H to construct a proper metric on G Subgroups Edit Every subgroup of a topological group is itself a topological group when given the subspace topology Every open subgroup H is also closed in G since the complement of H is the open set given by the union of open sets gH for g G H If H is a subgroup of G then the closure of H is also a subgroup Likewise if H is a normal subgroup of G the closure of H is normal in G Quotients and normal subgroups Edit If H is a subgroup of G the set of left cosets G H with the quotient topology is called a homogeneous space for G The quotient map q G G H displaystyle q G to G H is always open For example for a positive integer n the sphere Sn is a homogeneous space for the rotation group SO n 1 in R displaystyle mathbb R n 1 with Sn SO n 1 SO n A homogeneous space G H is Hausdorff if and only if H is closed in G 10 Partly for this reason it is natural to concentrate on closed subgroups when studying topological groups If H is a normal subgroup of G then the quotient group G H becomes a topological group when given the quotient topology It is Hausdorff if and only if H is closed in G For example the quotient group R Z displaystyle mathbb R mathbb Z is isomorphic to the circle group S1 In any topological group the identity component i e the connected component containing the identity element is a closed normal subgroup If C is the identity component and a is any point of G then the left coset aC is the component of G containing a So the collection of all left cosets or right cosets of C in G is equal to the collection of all components of G It follows that the quotient group G C is totally disconnected 11 Closure and compactness Edit In any commutative topological group the product assuming the group is multiplicative KC of a compact set K and a closed set C is a closed set 4 Furthermore for any subsets R and S of G cl R cl S cl RS 4 If H is a subgroup of a commutative topological group G and if N is a neighborhood in G of the identity element such that H cl N is closed then H is closed 4 Every discrete subgroup of a Hausdorff commutative topological group is closed 4 Isomorphism theorems Edit The isomorphism theorems from ordinary group theory are not always true in the topological setting This is because a bijective homomorphism need not be an isomorphism of topological groups For example a native version of the first isomorphism theorem is false for topological groups if f G H displaystyle f G to H is a morphism of topological groups that is a continuous homomorphism it is not necessarily true that the induced homomorphism f G ker f I m f displaystyle tilde f G ker f to mathrm Im f is an isomorphism of topological groups it will be a bijective continuous homomorphism but it will not necessarily be a homeomorphism In other words it will not necessarily admit an inverse in the category of topological groups There is a version of the first isomorphism theorem for topological groups which may be stated as follows if f G H displaystyle f G to H is a continuous homomorphism then the induced homomorphism from G ker f to im f is an isomorphism if and only if the map f is open onto its image 12 The third isomorphism theorem however is true more or less verbatim for topological groups as one may easily check Hilbert s fifth problem EditThere are several strong results on the relation between topological groups and Lie groups First every continuous homomorphism of Lie groups G H displaystyle G to H is smooth It follows that a topological group has a unique structure of a Lie group if one exists Also Cartan s theorem says that every closed subgroup of a Lie group is a Lie subgroup in particular a smooth submanifold Hilbert s fifth problem asked whether a topological group G that is a topological manifold must be a Lie group In other words does G have the structure of a smooth manifold making the group operations smooth As shown by Andrew Gleason Deane Montgomery and Leo Zippin the answer to this problem is yes 13 In fact G has a real analytic structure Using the smooth structure one can define the Lie algebra of G an object of linear algebra that determines a connected group G up to covering spaces As a result the solution to Hilbert s fifth problem reduces the classification of topological groups that are topological manifolds to an algebraic problem albeit a complicated problem in general The theorem also has consequences for broader classes of topological groups First every compact group understood to be Hausdorff is an inverse limit of compact Lie groups One important case is an inverse limit of finite groups called a profinite group For example the group Z displaystyle mathbb Z p of p adic integers and the absolute Galois group of a field are profinite groups Furthermore every connected locally compact group is an inverse limit of connected Lie groups 14 At the other extreme a totally disconnected locally compact group always contains a compact open subgroup which is necessarily a profinite group 15 For example the locally compact group GL n Q displaystyle mathbb Q p contains the compact open subgroup GL n Z displaystyle mathbb Z p which is the inverse limit of the finite groups GL n Z displaystyle mathbb Z pr as r goes to infinity Representations of compact or locally compact groups EditAn action of a topological group G on a topological space X is a group action of G on X such that the corresponding function G X X is continuous Likewise a representation of a topological group G on a real or complex topological vector space V is a continuous action of G on V such that for each g G the map v gv from V to itself is linear Group actions and representation theory are particularly well understood for compact groups generalizing what happens for finite groups For example every finite dimensional real or complex representation of a compact group is a direct sum of irreducible representations An infinite dimensional unitary representation of a compact group can be decomposed as a Hilbert space direct sum of irreducible representations which are all finite dimensional this is part of the Peter Weyl theorem 16 For example the theory of Fourier series describes the decomposition of the unitary representation of the circle group S1 on the complex Hilbert space L2 S1 The irreducible representations of S1 are all 1 dimensional of the form z zn for integers n where S1 is viewed as a subgroup of the multiplicative group C displaystyle mathbb C Each of these representations occurs with multiplicity 1 in L2 S1 The irreducible representations of all compact connected Lie groups have been classified In particular the character of each irreducible representation is given by the Weyl character formula More generally locally compact groups have a rich theory of harmonic analysis because they admit a natural notion of measure and integral given by the Haar measure Every unitary representation of a locally compact group can be described as a direct integral of irreducible unitary representations The decomposition is essentially unique if G is of Type I which includes the most important examples such as abelian groups and semisimple Lie groups 17 A basic example is the Fourier transform which decomposes the action of the additive group R displaystyle mathbb R on the Hilbert space L2 R displaystyle mathbb R as a direct integral of the irreducible unitary representations of R displaystyle mathbb R The irreducible unitary representations of R displaystyle mathbb R are all 1 dimensional of the form x e2piax for a R displaystyle mathbb R The irreducible unitary representations of a locally compact group may be infinite dimensional A major goal of representation theory related to the Langlands classification of admissible representations is to find the unitary dual the space of all irreducible unitary representations for the semisimple Lie groups The unitary dual is known in many cases such as SL 2 R displaystyle mathbb R but not all For a locally compact abelian group G every irreducible unitary representation has dimension 1 In this case the unitary dual G displaystyle hat G is a group in fact another locally compact abelian group Pontryagin duality states that for a locally compact abelian group G the dual of G displaystyle hat G is the original group G For example the dual group of the integers Z displaystyle mathbb Z is the circle group S1 while the group R displaystyle mathbb R of real numbers is isomorphic to its own dual Every locally compact group G has a good supply of irreducible unitary representations for example enough representations to distinguish the points of G the Gelfand Raikov theorem By contrast representation theory for topological groups that are not locally compact has so far been developed only in special situations and it may not be reasonable to expect a general theory For example there are many abelian Banach Lie groups for which every representation on Hilbert space is trivial 18 Homotopy theory of topological groups EditTopological groups are special among all topological spaces even in terms of their homotopy type One basic point is that a topological group G determines a path connected topological space the classifying space BG which classifies principal G bundles over topological spaces under mild hypotheses The group G is isomorphic in the homotopy category to the loop space of BG that implies various restrictions on the homotopy type of G 19 Some of these restrictions hold in the broader context of H spaces For example the fundamental group of a topological group G is abelian More generally the Whitehead product on the homotopy groups of G is zero Also for any field k the cohomology ring H G k has the structure of a Hopf algebra In view of structure theorems on Hopf algebras by Heinz Hopf and Armand Borel this puts strong restrictions on the possible cohomology rings of topological groups In particular if G is a path connected topological group whose rational cohomology ring H G Q displaystyle mathbb Q is finite dimensional in each degree then this ring must be a free graded commutative algebra over Q displaystyle mathbb Q that is the tensor product of a polynomial ring on generators of even degree with an exterior algebra on generators of odd degree 20 In particular for a connected Lie group G the rational cohomology ring of G is an exterior algebra on generators of odd degree Moreover a connected Lie group G has a maximal compact subgroup K which is unique up to conjugation and the inclusion of K into G is a homotopy equivalence So describing the homotopy types of Lie groups reduces to the case of compact Lie groups For example the maximal compact subgroup of SL 2 R displaystyle mathbb R is the circle group SO 2 and the homogeneous space SL 2 R displaystyle mathbb R SO 2 can be identified with the hyperbolic plane Since the hyperbolic plane is contractible the inclusion of the circle group into SL 2 R displaystyle mathbb R is a homotopy equivalence Finally compact connected Lie groups have been classified by Wilhelm Killing Elie Cartan and Hermann Weyl As a result there is an essentially complete description of the possible homotopy types of Lie groups For example a compact connected Lie group of dimension at most 3 is either a torus the group SU 2 diffeomorphic to the 3 sphere S3 or its quotient group SU 2 1 SO 3 diffeomorphic to RP3 Complete topological group EditSee also Complete uniform space Information about convergence of nets and filters such as definitions and properties can be found in the article about filters in topology Canonical uniformity on a commutative topological group Edit Main article Uniform space This article will henceforth assume that any topological group that we consider is an additive commutative topological group with identity element 0 displaystyle 0 The diagonal of X displaystyle X is the setD X x x x X displaystyle Delta X x x x in X and for any N X displaystyle N subseteq X containing 0 displaystyle 0 the canonical entourage or canonical vicinities around N displaystyle N is the set D X N x y X X x y N y X y N y D X N 0 displaystyle Delta X N x y in X times X x y in N bigcup y in X y N times y Delta X N times 0 For a topological group X t displaystyle X tau the canonical uniformity 21 on X displaystyle X is the uniform structure induced by the set of all canonical entourages D N displaystyle Delta N as N displaystyle N ranges over all neighborhoods of 0 displaystyle 0 in X displaystyle X That is it is the upward closure of the following prefilter on X X displaystyle X times X D N N is a neighborhood of 0 in X displaystyle left Delta N N text is a neighborhood of 0 text in X right where this prefilter forms what is known as a base of entourages of the canonical uniformity For a commutative additive group X displaystyle X a fundamental system of entourages B displaystyle mathcal B is called a translation invariant uniformity if for every B B displaystyle B in mathcal B x y B displaystyle x y in B if and only if x z y z B displaystyle x z y z in B for all x y z X displaystyle x y z in X A uniformity B displaystyle mathcal B is called translation invariant if it has a base of entourages that is translation invariant 22 The canonical uniformity on any commutative topological group is translation invariant The same canonical uniformity would result by using a neighborhood basis of the origin rather the filter of all neighborhoods of the origin Every entourage D X N displaystyle Delta X N contains the diagonal D X D X 0 x x x X displaystyle Delta X Delta X 0 x x x in X because 0 N displaystyle 0 in N If N displaystyle N is symmetric that is N N displaystyle N N then D X N displaystyle Delta X N is symmetric meaning that D X N op D X N displaystyle Delta X N operatorname op Delta X N and D X N D X N x z there exists y X such that x z y N y X y N y N D X N N displaystyle Delta X N circ Delta X N x z text there exists y in X text such that x z in y N bigcup y in X y N times y N Delta X N times N The topology induced on X displaystyle X by the canonical uniformity is the same as the topology that X displaystyle X started with that is it is t displaystyle tau Cauchy prefilters and nets Edit Main articles Filters in topology and Net mathematics The general theory of uniform spaces has its own definition of a Cauchy prefilter and Cauchy net For the canonical uniformity on X displaystyle X these reduces down to the definition described below Suppose x x i i I displaystyle x bullet left x i right i in I is a net in X displaystyle X and y y j j J displaystyle y bullet left y j right j in J is a net in Y displaystyle Y Make I J displaystyle I times J into a directed set by declaring i j i 2 j 2 displaystyle i j leq left i 2 j 2 right if and only if i i 2 and j j 2 displaystyle i leq i 2 text and j leq j 2 Then 23 x y x i y j i j I J displaystyle x bullet times y bullet left x i y j right i j in I times J denotes the product net If X Y displaystyle X Y then the image of this net under the addition map X X X displaystyle X times X to X denotes the sum of these two nets x y x i y j i j I J displaystyle x bullet y bullet left x i y j right i j in I times J and similarly their difference is defined to be the image of the product net under the subtraction map x y x i y j i j I J displaystyle x bullet y bullet left x i y j right i j in I times J A net x x i i I displaystyle x bullet left x i right i in I in an additive topological group X displaystyle X is called a Cauchy net if 24 x i x j i j I I 0 in X displaystyle left x i x j right i j in I times I to 0 text in X or equivalently if for every neighborhood N displaystyle N of 0 displaystyle 0 in X displaystyle X there exists some i 0 I displaystyle i 0 in I such that x i x j N displaystyle x i x j in N for all indices i j i 0 displaystyle i j geq i 0 A Cauchy sequence is a Cauchy net that is a sequence If B displaystyle B is a subset of an additive group X displaystyle X and N displaystyle N is a set containing 0 displaystyle 0 thenB displaystyle B is said to be an N displaystyle N small set or small of order N displaystyle N if B B N displaystyle B B subseteq N 25 A prefilter B displaystyle mathcal B on an additive topological group X displaystyle X called a Cauchy prefilter if it satisfies any of the following equivalent conditions B B 0 displaystyle mathcal B mathcal B to 0 in X displaystyle X where B B B C B C B displaystyle mathcal B mathcal B B C B C in mathcal B is a prefilter B B B B 0 displaystyle B B B in mathcal B to 0 in X displaystyle X where B B B B displaystyle B B B in mathcal B is a prefilter equivalent to B B displaystyle mathcal B mathcal B For every neighborhood N displaystyle N of 0 displaystyle 0 in X displaystyle X B displaystyle mathcal B contains some N displaystyle N small set that is there exists some B B displaystyle B in mathcal B such that B B N displaystyle B B subseteq N 25 and if X displaystyle X is commutative then also For every neighborhood N displaystyle N of 0 displaystyle 0 in X displaystyle X there exists some B B displaystyle B in mathcal B and some x X displaystyle x in X such that B x N displaystyle B subseteq x N 25 It suffices to check any of the above condition for any given neighborhood basis of 0 displaystyle 0 in X displaystyle X Suppose B displaystyle mathcal B is a prefilter on a commutative topological group X displaystyle X and x X displaystyle x in X Then B x displaystyle mathcal B to x in X displaystyle X if and only if x cl B displaystyle x in operatorname cl mathcal B and B displaystyle mathcal B is Cauchy 23 Complete commutative topological group Edit Main article Complete uniform space Recall that for any S X displaystyle S subseteq X a prefilter C displaystyle mathcal C on S displaystyle S is necessarily a subset of S displaystyle wp S that is C S displaystyle mathcal C subseteq wp S A subset S displaystyle S of a topological group X displaystyle X is called a complete subset if it satisfies any of the following equivalent conditions Every Cauchy prefilter C S displaystyle mathcal C subseteq wp S on S displaystyle S converges to at least one point of S displaystyle S If X displaystyle X is Hausdorff then every prefilter on S displaystyle S will converge to at most one point of X displaystyle X But if X displaystyle X is not Hausdorff then a prefilter may converge to multiple points in X displaystyle X The same is true for nets Every Cauchy net in S displaystyle S converges to at least one point of S displaystyle S Every Cauchy filter C displaystyle mathcal C on S displaystyle S converges to at least one point of S displaystyle S S displaystyle S is a complete uniform space under the point set topology definition of complete uniform space when S displaystyle S is endowed with the uniformity induced on it by the canonical uniformity of X displaystyle X A subset S displaystyle S is called a sequentially complete subset if every Cauchy sequence in S displaystyle S or equivalently every elementary Cauchy filter prefilter on S displaystyle S converges to at least one point of S displaystyle S Importantly convergence outside of S displaystyle S is allowed If X displaystyle X is not Hausdorff and if every Cauchy prefilter on S displaystyle S converges to some point of S displaystyle S then S displaystyle S will be complete even if some or all Cauchy prefilters on S displaystyle S also converge to points s in the complement X S displaystyle X setminus S In short there is no requirement that these Cauchy prefilters on S displaystyle S converge only to points in S displaystyle S The same can be said of the convergence of Cauchy nets in S displaystyle S As a consequence if a commutative topological group X displaystyle X is not Hausdorff then every subset of the closure of 0 displaystyle 0 say S cl 0 displaystyle S subseteq operatorname cl 0 is complete since it is clearly compact and every compact set is necessarily complete So in particular if S displaystyle S neq varnothing for example if S displaystyle S a is singleton set such as S 0 displaystyle S 0 then S displaystyle S would be complete even though every Cauchy net in S displaystyle S and every Cauchy prefilter on S displaystyle S converges to every point in cl 0 displaystyle operatorname cl 0 include those points in cl 0 displaystyle operatorname cl 0 that are not in S displaystyle S This example also shows that complete subsets indeed even compact subsets of a non Hausdorff space may fail to be closed for example if S cl 0 displaystyle varnothing neq S subseteq operatorname cl 0 then S displaystyle S is closed if and only if S cl 0 displaystyle S operatorname cl 0 A commutative topological group X displaystyle X is called a complete group if any of the following equivalent conditions hold X displaystyle X is complete as a subset of itself Every Cauchy net in X displaystyle X converges to at least one point of X displaystyle X There exists a neighborhood of 0 displaystyle 0 in X displaystyle X that is also a complete subset of X displaystyle X 25 This implies that every locally compact commutative topological group is complete When endowed with its canonical uniformity X displaystyle X becomes is a complete uniform space In the general theory of uniform spaces a uniform space is called a complete uniform space if each Cauchy filter in X displaystyle X converges in X t displaystyle X tau to some point of X displaystyle X A topological group is called sequentially complete if it is a sequentially complete subset of itself Neighborhood basis Suppose C displaystyle C is a completion of a commutative topological group X displaystyle X with X C displaystyle X subseteq C and that N displaystyle mathcal N is a neighborhood base of the origin in X displaystyle X Then the family of sets cl C N N N displaystyle left operatorname cl C N N in mathcal N right is a neighborhood basis at the origin in C displaystyle C 23 Uniform continuityLet X displaystyle X and Y displaystyle Y be topological groups D X displaystyle D subseteq X and f D Y displaystyle f D to Y be a map Then f D Y displaystyle f D to Y is uniformly continuous if for every neighborhood U displaystyle U of the origin in X displaystyle X there exists a neighborhood V displaystyle V of the origin in Y displaystyle Y such that for all x y D displaystyle x y in D if y x U displaystyle y x in U then f y f x V displaystyle f y f x in V Generalizations EditVarious generalizations of topological groups can be obtained by weakening the continuity conditions 26 A semitopological group is a group G with a topology such that for each c G the two functions G G defined by x xc and x cx are continuous A quasitopological group is a semitopological group in which the function mapping elements to their inverses is also continuous A paratopological group is a group with a topology such that the group operation is continuous See also EditAlgebraic group Algebraic variety with a group structure Complete field Algebraic structure that is complete relative to a metricPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Compact group Topological group with compact topology Complete topological vector space A TVS where points that get progressively closer to each other will always converge to a point Lie group Group that is also a differentiable manifold with group operations that are smooth Locally compact field Locally compact group topological group G for which the underlying topology is locally compact and Hausdorff so that the Haar measure can be definedPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Locally compact quantum group relatively new C algebraic approach toward quantum groupsPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Profinite group topological group that is isomorphic to the inverse projective limit of an inverse system of discrete finite groupsPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Ordered topological vector space Topological abelian group concept in mathematicsPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Topological field Algebraic structure with addition multiplication and divisionPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Topological module Topological ring ring where ring operations are continuousPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Topological semigroup semigroup with continuous operationPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Topological vector space Vector space with a notion of nearnessNotes Edit i e Continuous means that for any open set U G f 1 U is open in the domain dom f of f Citations Edit Pontrjagin 1946 p 52 Hewitt amp Ross 1979 p 1 Armstrong 1997 p 73 Bredon 1997 p 51 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Narici amp Beckenstein 2011 pp 19 45 Bourbaki 1998 section III 3 Bourbaki 1998 section III 2 7 Montgomery amp Zippin 1955 section 1 22 Struble Raimond A 1974 Metrics in locally compact groups Compositio Mathematica 28 3 217 222 Haagerup Uffe Przybyszewska Agata 2006 Proper metrics on locally compact groups and proper affine isometric actions on CiteSeerX 10 1 1 236 827 Bourbaki 1998 section III 2 5 Bourbaki 1998 section I 11 5 Bourbaki 1998 section III 2 8 Montgomery amp Zippin 1955 section 4 10 Montgomery amp Zippin 1955 section 4 6 Bourbaki 1998 section III 4 6 Hewitt amp Ross 1970 Theorem 27 40 Mackey 1976 section 2 4 Banaszczyk 1983 Hatcher 2001 Theorem 4 66 Hatcher 2001 Theorem 3C 4 Edwards 1995 p 61 Schaefer amp Wolff 1999 pp 12 19 a b c Narici amp Beckenstein 2011 pp 47 66 Narici amp Beckenstein 2011 p 48 a b c d Narici amp Beckenstein 2011 pp 48 51 Arhangel skii amp Tkachenko 2008 p 12 References EditArhangel skii Alexander Tkachenko Mikhail 2008 Topological Groups and Related Structures World Scientific ISBN 978 90 78677 06 2 MR 2433295 Armstrong Mark A 1997 Basic Topology 1st ed Springer Verlag ISBN 0 387 90839 0 MR 0705632 Banaszczyk Wojciech 1983 On the existence of exotic Banach Lie groups Mathematische Annalen 264 4 485 493 doi 10 1007 BF01456956 MR 0716262 S2CID 119755117 Bourbaki Nicolas 1998 General Topology Chapters 1 4 Springer Verlag ISBN 3 540 64241 2 MR 1726779 Folland Gerald B 1995 A Course in Abstract Harmonic Analysis CRC Press ISBN 0 8493 8490 7 Bredon Glen E 1997 Topology and Geometry Graduate Texts in Mathematics 1st ed Springer Verlag ISBN 0 387 97926 3 MR 1700700 Hatcher Allen 2001 Algebraic Topology Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 79540 0 MR 1867354 Edwards Robert E 1995 Functional Analysis Theory and Applications New York Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 68143 6 OCLC 30593138 Hewitt Edwin Ross Kenneth A 1979 Abstract Harmonic Analysis vol 1 2nd ed Springer Verlag ISBN 978 0387941905 MR 0551496 Hewitt Edwin Ross Kenneth A 1970 Abstract Harmonic Analysis vol 2 Springer Verlag ISBN 978 0387048321 MR 0262773 Mackey George W 1976 The Theory of Unitary Group Representations University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 50051 9 MR 0396826 Montgomery Deane Zippin Leo 1955 Topological Transformation Groups New York London Interscience Publishers MR 0073104 Narici Lawrence Beckenstein Edward 2011 Topological Vector Spaces Pure and applied mathematics Second ed Boca Raton FL CRC Press ISBN 978 1584888666 OCLC 144216834 Pontrjagin Leon 1946 Topological Groups Princeton University Press Pontryagin Lev S 1986 Topological Groups trans from Russian by Arlen Brown and P S V Naidu 3rd ed New York Gordon and Breach Science Publishers ISBN 2 88124 133 6 MR 0201557 Porteous Ian R 1981 Topological Geometry 2nd ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 23160 4 MR 0606198 Schaefer Helmut H Wolff Manfred P 1999 Topological Vector Spaces GTM Vol 8 Second ed New York NY Springer New York Imprint Springer ISBN 978 1 4612 7155 0 OCLC 840278135 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Topological group amp oldid 1151935652, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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