Dense
DENSE IS SPRAWLED OVER LIKE 4 PAGES
- I've distilled some of it Equivalent statements to a set being dense there, but I need to .... fix this page up, it's a mess. I should probably move the equivalent definitions to here, as they're like... "easy equivalent" and may well be definitions, not like ... a proposition of equivalence.
- That's a woolly distinction
Anyway, there is work required to fix this up.
SEE: List of topological properties for a smaller and neater listContents
[hide]Temporary summary
Let (X,J) be a topological space, and (X,d) be a metric space. Then for an arbitrary subset of X, say A∈P(X), we say A is dense in X if:
- Topological: ∀U∈J[U∩A≠∅][1]
- There are some equivalent conditions[Note 1]
- Closure(A)=X (sometimes written: ¯A=X)
- X−A contains no (non-empty) open subsets of X
- Symbolically: ∀U∈J[U⊈X−A] - which is easily seen to be equivalent to: ∀U∈J∃p∈U[p∉X−A]
- X−A has no interior points[Note 2]
- Symbolically we may write this as: ∀p∈X−A[¬(∃U∈J[p∈U∧U⊆A)]
- ⟺∀p∈X−A∀U∈J[¬(p∈U∧U⊆A)]
- ⟺∀p∈X−A∀U∈J[(¬(p∈U))∨(¬(U⊆A))] - by the negation of logical and
- ⟺∀p∈X−A∀U∈J[p∉U∨U⊈A] - of course by the implies-subset relation we see (A⊆B)⟺(∀a∈A[a∈B]), thus:
- ⟺∀p∈X−A∀U∈J[p∉U∨(∃q∈U[q∉A])]
- Symbolically we may write this as: ∀p∈X−A[¬(∃U∈J[p∈U∧U⊆A)]
- There are some equivalent conditions[Note 1]
- Metric: ∀x∈X∀ϵ>0[Bϵ(x)∩A≠∅
- There are no equivalent statements at this time.
The rest of the page continues below. It will be refactored soon.
Definition
Let (X,J) be a topological space and let A∈P(X) be an arbitrary subset of X. We say "A is dense in X if[2]:
- ¯A=X - that is to say that the closure of A is the entirety of X itself.
Some authors give the following equivalent definition to A being dense[1]:
- ∀U∈J∃a∈A[U≠∅⟹y∈U], which is obviously equivalent to: ∀U∈J[U≠∅⟹A∩U≠∅] (see Claim 1 below)
- In words:
Metric spaces definition
Let (X,d) me a metric space, we say that E∈P(X) (so E is an arbitrary subset of X) if[1]:
Claim 2: for a metric space (X,d) a subset, E∈P(X) is dense in the metric sense if and only if it is dense in (X,J) where J is the topology induced by the metric d.
Proof of claims
Claim 1
This is used for both cases, and it should really be factored out into its own page. Eg:
The message provided is:
This proof has been marked as an page requiring an easy proof
Claim 2
The message provided is:
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See also
Notes
- Jump up ↑ These are not just logically equivalent to density, they could be definitions for density, and may well be in some books.
- Jump up ↑ a∈A is an interior point of A if:
- ∃U∈J[a∈U∧U⊆A] (by Functional Analysis - V1 - Dzung M. Ha - can't use references in reference tag!)
- Jump up ↑ This is a trivial restatement of the claim and not worth going on its own page, unless it can be generalised (eg detached from dense-ness)