Open main menu
Home
Random
Recent changes
Special pages
Community portal
Preferences
About Wikipedia
Disclaimers
Incubator escapee wiki
Search
User menu
Talk
Dark mode
Contributions
Create account
Log in
Editing
Uniform space
(section)
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
==Completeness== Generalizing the notion of [[complete metric space]], one can also define completeness for uniform spaces. Instead of working with [[Cauchy sequence]]s, one works with [[Cauchy filter]]s (or [[Cauchy net]]s). A '''{{em|{{visible anchor|Cauchy filter}}}}''' (respectively, a '''{{em|{{visible anchor|Cauchy prefilter}}}}''') <math>F</math> on a uniform space <math>X</math> is a [[Filter (set theory)|filter]] (respectively, a [[prefilter]]) <math>F</math> such that for every entourage <math>U,</math> there exists <math>A \in F</math> with <math>A \times A \subseteq U.</math> In other words, a filter is Cauchy if it contains "arbitrarily small" sets. It follows from the definitions that each filter that converges (with respect to the topology defined by the uniform structure) is a Cauchy filter. A '''{{em|{{visible anchor|minimal Cauchy filter}}}}''' is a Cauchy filter that does not contain any smaller (that is, coarser) Cauchy filter (other than itself). It can be shown that every Cauchy filter contains a unique {{em|minimal Cauchy filter}}. The neighbourhood filter of each point (the filter consisting of all neighbourhoods of the point) is a minimal Cauchy filter. Conversely, a uniform space is called '''{{em|{{visible anchor|text=complete|Complete uniform space|Complete space}}}}''' if every Cauchy filter converges. Any compact Hausdorff space is a complete uniform space with respect to the unique uniformity compatible with the topology. Complete uniform spaces enjoy the following important property: if <math>f : A \to Y</math> is a ''uniformly continuous'' function from a [[Dense set|''dense'' subset]] <math>A</math> of a uniform space <math>X</math> into a ''complete'' uniform space <math>Y,</math> then <math>f</math> can be extended (uniquely) into a uniformly continuous function on all of <math>X.</math> A topological space that can be made into a complete uniform space, whose uniformity induces the original topology, is called a [[completely uniformizable space]]. A {{visible anchor|completion|completion of a uniform space|text='''{{em|completion}}''' of a uniform space}} <math>X</math> is a pair <math>(i, C)</math> consisting of a complete uniform space <math>C</math> and a [[#uniform embedding|uniform embedding]] <math>i : X \to C</math> whose image <math>i(X)</math> is a [[Dense set|dense subset]] of <math>C.</math> ===Hausdorff completion of a uniform space=== As with metric spaces, every uniform space <math>X</math> has a {{visible anchor|Hausdorff completion|Hausdorff completion of a uniform space|text='''{{em|Hausdorff completion}}'''}}: that is, there exists a complete Hausdorff uniform space <math>Y</math> and a uniformly continuous map <math>i : X \to Y</math> (if <math>X</math> is a Hausdorff uniform space then <math>i</math> is a [[topological embedding]]) with the following property: : for any uniformly continuous mapping <math>f</math> of <math>X</math> into a complete Hausdorff uniform space <math>Z,</math> there is a unique uniformly continuous map <math>g : Y \to Z</math> such that <math>f = g i.</math> The Hausdorff completion <math>Y</math> is unique up to isomorphism. As a set, <math>Y</math> can be taken to consist of the {{em|minimal}} Cauchy filters on <math>X.</math> As the neighbourhood filter <math>\mathbf{B}(x)</math> of each point <math>x</math> in <math>X</math> is a minimal Cauchy filter, the map <math>i</math> can be defined by mapping <math>x</math> to <math>\mathbf{B}(x).</math> The map <math>i</math> thus defined is in general not injective; in fact, the graph of the equivalence relation <math>i(x) = i(x')</math> is the intersection of all entourages of <math>X,</math> and thus <math>i</math> is injective precisely when <math>X</math> is Hausdorff. The uniform structure on <math>Y</math> is defined as follows: for each {{visible anchor|symmetric entourage|text=''symmetric'' entourage}} <math>V</math> (that is, such that <math>(x, y) \in V</math> implies <math>(y, x) \in V</math>), let <math>C(V)</math> be the set of all pairs <math>(F, G)</math> of minimal Cauchy filters ''which have in common at least one <math>V</math>-small set''. The sets <math>C(V)</math> can be shown to form a fundamental system of entourages; <math>Y</math> is equipped with the uniform structure thus defined. The set <math>i(X)</math> is then a dense subset of <math>Y.</math> If <math>X</math> is Hausdorff, then <math>i</math> is an isomorphism onto <math>i(X),</math> and thus <math>X</math> can be identified with a dense subset of its completion. Moreover, <math>i(X)</math> is always Hausdorff; it is called the {{visible anchor|associated Hausdorff uniform space|text='''Hausdorff uniform space associated with''' <math>X.</math>}} If <math>R</math> denotes the equivalence relation <math>i(x) = i(x'),</math> then the quotient space <math>X / R</math> is homeomorphic to <math>i(X).</math>
Edit summary
(Briefly describe your changes)
By publishing changes, you agree to the
Terms of Use
, and you irrevocably agree to release your contribution under the
CC BY-SA 4.0 License
and the
GFDL
. You agree that a hyperlink or URL is sufficient attribution under the Creative Commons license.
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)