| word looked up : | home / archive |
Homeomorphism : HomeomorphicIn topology, two geometrical objects (or "spaces") are called homeomorphic if, roughly speaking, the first can be deformed into the second by stretching and bending; cutting is also allowed, but only if the two parts are later glued back together along exactly the same cut. For example, a square and a circle are homeomorphic. A hollow sphere containing a smaller solid ball is homeomorphic to a hollow cube with a solid cube outside of it. If two objects are homeomorphic, one can find a function which maps points from the first object to corresponding points of the second object, and vice versa. Such a function is called a homeomorphism; intuitively, it maps points in the first object that are "close together" to points in the second object that are close together, and points in the first object that are not close together to points in the second object that are not close together. Topology is the study of those properties of objects that do not change when homeomorphisms are applied. For a formal definition, suppose X and Y are topological spaces, and f is a function from X to Y. Then f is a homeomorphism iff all the following hold:
If there exists a homeomorphism f : X -> Y, then Y is said to be homeomorphic to X (or to be a homeomorph of X). In this case, Y is also homeomorphic to X, since f -1 is a homeomorphism, and we say that X and Y belong to the same homeomorphism class. For example, the unit circle S1 and the unit square in R2 are homeomorphic. The open interval (-1, 1) is homeomorphic to the real numbers R. The product space S1 × S1 and the two-dimensional torus are homeomorphic. The third requirement, that f -1 be continuous, is essential. Consider for instance the function f : [0, 2π) -> S1 defined by f(φ) = (cos(φ), sin(φ)). This function is bijective and continuous, but not a homeomorphism. If two spaces are homeomorphic then they have exactly the same topological properties. For example, if one of them is compact, then the other is as well; if one of them is connected, then the other is as well; if one of them is Hausdorff, then the other is as well; their homology groups will coincide. Note however that this doesn't extend to properties defined via a metric; there are metric spaces which are homeomorphic even though one of them is complete and the other isn't. Homeomorphisms are the isomorphisms in the category of all topological spaces. As such, the composition of two homeomorphisms is again a homeomorphism, and the set of all homeomorphisms X → X forms a group.
Informal discussionThe intuitive criterion of stretching, bending, cutting and glueing back together takes a certain amount of practice to apply correctly--it isn't obvious from the above description that deforming a line segment to a point is impermissable, for instance. It is thus important to realize that it is the formal definition given above that counts. This characterization of a homeomorphism often leads to confusion with the concept of homotopy, which is actually defined as a continuous deformation, but from one function to another, rather than one space to another. In the case of a homeomorphism, envisioning a continuous deformation is a mental tool for keeping track of which points on space X correspond to which points on Y -- one just follows them as X deforms. In the case of homotopy, the continuous deformation from one map to the other is of the essence, and it is also less restrictive, since none of the maps involved need to be one-to-one or onto. Homotopy does lead to a relation on spaces: homotopy equivalence[?]. There is a name for the kind of deformation involved in visualizing a homeomorphism. It is (except when cutting and regluing are required) an isotopy between the identity map on X and the homeomorphism from X to Y. See also local homeomorphism. The wild woodland
an independent centre of rustic life, it became an annex to great
winter resort. Three or four big hotels were planted there, and in
flourished. The summer cottage also appeared and multiplied; and
his struggle toward the finest civilization--afternoon teas, and
few servants in livery.
The very name of Bytown was discarded as being.html">being too American and
more romantic and appropriate. You will look in vain for Bytown on
wasting a vast water-power to turn its dripping wheel and cut up a
little farther up the river.html">river, which rips out thousands of feet.html">feet of
spruce which the old lumbermen would have thought hardly worth
the little trees and turn them into paper, and a chair factory, and
of French-Canadians employed in them as workmen.
Hose Ransom sold his place on the hill to one of the hotel
with the white palings. There were no more bleeding-hearts in the
if they were painted; and across the circle of smooth lawn in front
ornamental plants letters two feet long, immensely ugly. Hose had
Antic cottage on the main street. Little Billy Ransom had grown up
and a tenor voice, which being discovered by an enterprising patron
sing.html">sing. Some day you will hear of his debut in grand opera, as
beside the river, refusing all the good offers which were made to
lak' me. All dese walls got full from museek, jus' lak' de wood of
so long. I lak' to lissen to dat rivaire in de night. She sing
for I go away? W'at I get? W'at you can gif' me. All is still licensed under the GNU FDL.
|
|
|||||