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Product topology

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Template:Short description Template:Redirect In topology and related areas of mathematics, a product space is the Cartesian product of a family of topological spaces equipped with a natural topology called the product topology. This topology differs from another, perhaps more natural-seeming, topology called the box topology, which can also be given to a product space and which agrees with the product topology when the product is over only finitely many spaces. However, the product topology is "correct" in that it makes the product space a categorical product of its factors, whereas the box topology is too fine; in that sense the product topology is the natural topology on the Cartesian product.

Definition

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Throughout, <math>I</math> will be some non-empty index set and for every index <math>i \in I,</math> let <math>X_i</math> be a topological space. Denote the Cartesian product of the sets <math>X_i</math> by

<math display=block>X := \prod X_{\bull} := \prod_{i \in I} X_i</math>

and for every index <math>i \in I,</math> denote the <math>i</math>-th Template:Em by

<math display=block>\begin{align} p_i :\ \prod_{j \in I} X_j &\to X_i, \\[3mu]

      (x_j)_{j \in I}     &\mapsto x_i. \\

\end{align}</math>

The Template:Em, sometimes called the Template:Em, on <math display="inline">\prod_{i \in I} X_i</math> is defined to be the coarsest topology (that is, the topology with the fewest open sets) for which all the projections <math display="inline">p_i : \prod X_{\bull} \to X_i</math> are continuous. It is the initial topology on <math display="inline">\prod_{i \in I} X_i</math> with respect to the family of projections <math>\left\{p_i\mathbin{\big\vert} i \in I\right\}</math>. The Cartesian product <math display="inline">X := \prod_{i \in I} X_i</math> endowed with the product topology is called the Template:Em. The open sets in the product topology are arbitrary unions (finite or infinite) of sets of the form <math display="inline">\prod_{i \in I} U_i,</math> where each <math>U_i</math> is open in <math>X_i</math> and <math>U_i \neq X_i</math> for only finitely many <math>i.</math> In particular, for a finite product (in particular, for the product of two topological spaces), the set of all Cartesian products between one basis element from each <math>X_i</math> gives a basis for the product topology of <math display="inline">\prod_{i\in I} X_i.</math> That is, for a finite product, the set of all <math display="inline">\prod_{i \in I} U_i,</math> where <math>U_i</math> is an element of the (chosen) basis of <math>X_i,</math> is a basis for the product topology of <math display="inline">\prod_{i\in I} X_i.</math>

The product topology on <math display="inline">\prod_{i \in I} X_i</math> is the topology generated by sets of the form <math>p_i^{-1}\left(U_i\right),</math> where <math>i \in I</math> and <math>U_i</math> is an open subset of <math>X_i.</math> In other words, the sets

<math display=block> \left\{p_i^{-1}\left(U_i\right) \mathbin{\big\vert} i \in I \text{ and } U_i \subseteq X_i \text{ is open in } X_i\right\} </math>

form a subbase for the topology on <math>X.</math> A subset of <math>X</math> is open if and only if it is a (possibly infinite) union of intersections of finitely many sets of the form <math>p_i^{-1}\left(U_i\right).</math> The <math>p_i^{-1}\left(U_i\right)</math> are sometimes called open cylinders, and their intersections are cylinder sets.

The product topology is also called the Template:Em because a sequence (or more generally, a net) in <math display="inline">\prod_{i \in I} X_i</math> converges if and only if all its projections to the spaces <math>X_i</math> converge. Explicitly, a sequence <math display="inline">s_{\bull} = \left(s_n\right)_{n=1}^{\infty}</math> (respectively, a net <math display="inline">s_{\bull} = \left(s_a\right)_{a \in A}</math>) converges to a given point <math display="inline">x \in \prod_{i \in I} X_i</math> if and only if <math>p_i\left(s_{\bull}\right) \to p_i(x)</math> in <math>X_i</math> for every index <math>i \in I,</math> where <math>p_i\left(s_{\bull}\right) := p_i \circ s_{\bull}</math> denotes <math>\left(p_i\left(s_n\right)\right)_{n=1}^{\infty}</math> (respectively, denotes <math>\left(p_i\left(s_a\right)\right)_{a \in A}</math>). In particular, if <math>X_i = \R</math> is used for all <math>i</math> then the Cartesian product is the space <math display="inline">\prod_{i \in I} \R = \R^I</math> of all real-valued functions on <math>I,</math> and convergence in the product topology is the same as pointwise convergence of functions.

Examples

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If the real line <math>\R</math> is endowed with its standard topology then the product topology on the product of <math>n</math> copies of <math>\R</math> is equal to the ordinary Euclidean topology on <math>\R^n.</math> (Because <math>n</math> is finite, this is also equivalent to the box topology on <math>\R^n.</math>)

The Cantor set is homeomorphic to the product of countably many copies of the discrete space <math>\{ 0, 1 \}</math> 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.

Several additional examples are given in the article on the initial topology.

Properties

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The set of Cartesian products between the open sets of the topologies of each <math>X_i</math> forms a basis for what is called the box topology on <math>X.</math> In general, the box topology is finer than the product topology, but for finite products they coincide.

The product space <math>X,</math> together with the canonical projections, can be characterized by the following universal property: if <math>Y</math> is a topological space, and for every <math>i \in I,</math> <math>f_i : Y \to X_i</math> is a continuous map, then there exists Template:Em continuous map <math>f : Y \to X</math> such that for each <math>i \in I</math> the following diagram commutes:

Template:Bi

This shows that the product space is a product in the category of topological spaces. It follows from the above universal property that a map <math>f : Y \to X</math> is continuous if and only if <math>f_i = p_i \circ f</math> is continuous for all <math>i \in I.</math> In many cases it is easier to check that the component functions <math>f_i</math> are continuous. Checking whether a map <math> X \to Y</math> is continuous is usually more difficult; one tries to use the fact that the <math>p_i</math> are continuous in some way.

In addition to being continuous, the canonical projections <math>p_i : X \to X_i</math> are open maps. This means that any open subset of the product space remains open when projected down to the <math>X_i.</math> The converse is not true: if <math>W</math> is a subspace of the product space whose projections down to all the <math>X_i</math> are open, then <math>W</math> need not be open in <math>X</math> (consider for instance <math display="inline">W = \R^2 \setminus (0, 1)^2.</math>) The canonical projections are not generally closed maps (consider for example the closed set <math display="inline">\left\{(x,y) \in \R^2 : xy = 1\right\},</math> whose projections onto both axes are <math>\R \setminus \{0\}</math>).

Suppose <math display="inline">\prod_{i \in I} S_i</math> is a product of arbitrary subsets, where <math>S_i \subseteq X_i</math> for every <math>i \in I.</math> If all <math>S_i</math> are Template:Em then <math display="inline">\prod_{i \in I} S_i</math> is a closed subset of the product space <math>X</math> if and only if every <math>S_i</math> is a closed subset of <math>X_i.</math> More generally, the closure of the product <math display="inline">\prod_{i \in I} S_i</math> of arbitrary subsets in the product space <math>X</math> is equal to the product of the closures:Template:Sfn

<math display=block> {\operatorname{Cl}_X}\Bigl(\prod_{i \in I} S_i\Bigr) = \prod_{i \in I} \bigl({\operatorname{Cl}_{X_i}} S_i\bigr). </math>

Any product of Hausdorff spaces is again a Hausdorff space.

Tychonoff's theorem, which is equivalent to the axiom of choice, states that any product of compact spaces is a compact space. A specialization of Tychonoff's theorem that requires only the ultrafilter lemma (and not the full strength of the axiom of choice) states that any product of compact Hausdorff spaces is a compact space.

If <math display="inline">z = \left(z_i\right)_{i \in I} \in X</math> is fixed then the set

<math display=block> \left\{ x = \left(x_i\right)_{i \in I} \in X \mathbin{\big\vert} x_i = z_i \text{ for all but finitely many } i \right\} </math>

is a dense subset of the product space <math>X</math>.Template:Sfn

Relation to other topological notions

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Separation

Compactness

Connectedness

  • Every product of connected (resp. path-connected) spaces is connected (resp. path-connected).
  • Every product of hereditarily disconnected spaces is hereditarily disconnected.

Metric spaces

Axiom of choice

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One of many ways to express the axiom of choice is to say that it is equivalent to the statement that the Cartesian product of a collection of non-empty sets is non-empty.<ref>Template:Citation</ref> The proof that this is equivalent to the statement of the axiom in terms of choice functions is immediate: one needs only to pick an element from each set to find a representative in the product. Conversely, a representative of the product is a set which contains exactly one element from each component.

The axiom of choice occurs again in the study of (topological) product spaces; for example, Tychonoff's theorem on compact sets is a more complex and subtle example of a statement that requires the axiom of choice and is equivalent to it in its most general formulation,<ref>Template:Citation</ref> and shows why the product topology may be considered the more useful topology to put on a Cartesian product.

See also

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Notes

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Template:Reflist

References

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