Jump to content

Proximity space

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Georgelulu (talk | contribs) at 22:21, 3 January 2010 (→‎References: added another reference of axiomatic construction of proximity space and nearness). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

In topology, a proximity space is an axiomatization of notions of "nearness" that hold set-to-set, as opposed to the better known point-to-set notions that characterize topological spaces.

The concept was described by Frigyes Riesz in 1908 and ignored at the time. It was rediscovered and axiomatized by V. A. Efremovič in 1934, but not published until 1951. In the interim, in 1940, A. N. Wallace discovered a version of the same concept.

Definition A proximity space (Xδ) is a set X with a relation δ between subsets of X satisfying the following properties:

For all subsets A, B and C of X

  1. A δ BB δ A
  2. A δ BA ≠ ø
  3. AB ≠ ø ⇒ A δ B
  4. A δ (BC) ⇔ (A δ B or A δ C)
  5. (∀E, A δ E or B δ (XE)) ⇒ A δ B

If A δ B we say A is near B or A and B are proximal. We say B is a proximal or δ-neighborhood of A, written A « B, if and only if A δ XB is false.

The main properties of this set neighborhood relation, listed below, provide an alternative axiomatic characterization of proximity spaces.

For all subsets A, B, C, and D of X,

  1. X«X
  2. A«BAB
  3. AB«CDA«D
  4. (A«B and A«C) ⇒ A«BC
  5. A«BXB«XA
  6. A«B ⇒ ∃E, A«E«B

A proximity space is called separated if {x} δ {y} implies x=y.

A proximity or proximal map is one that preserves nearness, that is, given f:(X,δ)→(X*,δ*), if A δ B in X, then f[A] δ* f[B] in X*. Equivalently, a map is proximal if the inverse map preserves proximal neighborhoodness. In the same notation, this means if C«*D holds in X*, then f−1[Cf−1[D] holds in X.

Given a proximity space, one can define a topology by letting A → {x : {x} δ A} be a Kuratowski closure operator. If the proximity space is separated, the resulting topology is Hausdorff. Proximity maps will be continuous between the induced topologies.

The resulting topology is always completely regular. This can be proven by imitating the usual proofs of Urysohn's lemma, using the last property of proximal neighborhoods to create the infinite increasing chain used in proving the lemma.

Given a compact Hausdorff space, there is a unique proximity whose corresponding topology is the given topology: A is near B if and only if their closures intersect. More generally, proximities classify the compactifications of a completely regular Hausdorff space.

A uniform space X induces a proximity relation by declaring A is near B if and only if A×B has nonempty intersection with every entourage. Uniformly continuous maps will then be proximally continuous.

References

S. A. Naimpally and B. D. Warrack; Proximity Spaces (Cambridge U, 1970).

Luminita Vita, Douglas Bridges. "A Constructive Theory of Point-Set Nearness". Retrieved 2010-01-01.