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Encyclopedia > Product topology

In topology, the cartesian product of topological spaces is turned into a topological space in the following way. Let I be a (possibly infinite) index set and suppose Xi is a topological space for every i in I. Set X = Π Xi, the cartesian product of the sets Xi. For every i in I, we have a canonical projection pi : X -> Xi. The product topology on X is defined to be the coarsest topology (i.e. the topology with the fewest open sets) which turns all the maps pi into continuous maps.


Explicitly, the topology on X can be described as follows. A subset of X is open if and only if it is a union of (possibly infinitely many) intersections of finitely many sets of the form pi-1(O), where i in I and O is an open subset of Xi. This implies that, in general, not all products of open sets need to be open in X.


We can describe a basis for the product topology using bases of the constituting spaces Xi. Suppose that for each i in I we choose a set Yi which is either the whole space Xi or a basis set of that space, in such a way that Xi = Yi for all but finitely many i in I. Let B be the cartesian product of the sets Yi. The collection of all sets B that can be constructed in this fashion is a basis of the product space. In particular, this means that a product of finitely many spaces has a basis given by the products of base elements of the Xi.

Contents

Examples

If one starts with the standard topology on the real line R and defines a topology on the product of n copies of R in this fashion, one obtains the ordinary Euclidean topology on Rn.


The Cantor set is homeomorphic to the product of countably many copies of the discrete space {0,1} and the space of irrational numbers is homeomorphic to the product of countably many copies of the natural numbers, where again each copy carries the discrete topology.


Properties

The product topology is also called the topology of pointwise convergence because of the following fact: a sequence (or net) in X converges if and only if all its projections to the spaces Xi converge. In particular, if one considers the space X = RI of all real valued functions on I, convergence in the product topology is the same as pointwise convergence of functions.


In addition to being continuous, the canonical projections pi : X -> Xi are open maps. This means that any open subset of the product space remains open when projected down to the Xi. The converse is not true: if W is a subset of the product space whose projections down to all the Xi are open, then W need not be open in X. (Consider for instance W = R2 \ (0,1)2.)


An important theorem about the product topology is Tychonoff's theorem: any product of compact spaces is compact. This is easy for finite products, but the statement is (surprisingly) also true for infinite products, when the proof requires the axiom of choice in some form.


The product space X, together with the canonical projections, can be characterized by the following universal property: If Y is a topological space, and for every i in I, fi : Y -> Xi is a continuous map, then there exists precisely one continuous map f : Y -> X such that pi o f = fi for all i in I. This shows that the product space is a product in the sense of category theory.


To check whether a given map f : Y -> X is continuous, one can use the following handy criterion: f is continuous if and only if pi o f is continuous for all i in I. In other words, if we write f as a tuple of its components, f=(fi)i in I, then f is continuous if and only if each of the fi is. Checking whether a map g : X -> Z is continuous is usually more difficult; one tries to use the fact that the pi are continuous in some way.


Relation to other topological notions

  • Separation
  • Compactness
    • Every product of compact spaces is compact (Tychonoff's theorem)
    • A product of locally compact spaces need not be locally compact
  • Connectedness
    • Every product of connected (resp. path-connected) spaces is connected (resp. path-connected)
    • Every product of hereditarily disconnected spaces is hereditarily disconnected.

A map that "locally looks like" a canonical projection F × UU is called a fiber bundle.


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
Direct product - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (955 words)
The direct product for vector spaces (not to be confused with the tensor product) is very similar to the one defined for groups above, using the cartesian product with the operation of addition being componentwise, and the scalar multiplication just distributing over all the components.
The product topology for infinite products has a twist, and this has to do with being able to make all the projection maps continuous and to make all functions into the product continuous if and only if all its component functions are continuous (i.e.
Products (with the product topology) are nice with respect to preserving properties of their factors; for example, the product of Hausdorff spaces is Hausdorff; the product of connected spaces is connected, and the product of compact spaces is compact.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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