Quotient topology
Note: Motivation for quotient topology may be useful
Contents
[hide]Definition of Quotient topology
If (X,J) is a topological space, A is a set, and p:(X,J)→A is a surjective map then there exists exactly one topology JQ relative to which p is a quotient map. This is the quotient topology induced by p
The quotient topology is actually a topology
Quotient map
Let (X,J) and (Y,K) be topological spaces and let p:X→Y be a surjective map.
p is a quotient map[1] if we have U∈K⟺p−1(U)∈J
Also known as:
- Identification map
Stronger than continuity
If we had K={∅,Y} then p is automatically continuous (as it is surjective), the point is that K is the largest topology we can define on Y such that p is continuous
TODO: Now we can explore the characteristic property (with Id:X∼→X∼ ) for now
Quotient space
Given a Topological space (X,J) and an Equivalence relation ∼, then the map: q:(X,J)→(X∼,Q) with q:p↦[p] (which is a quotient map) is continuous (as above)
The topological space (X∼,Q) is the quotient space[2] where Q is the topology induced by the quotient
Also known as:
- Identification space