Why the circle can't be homeomorphic to a real interval

In summary, the author says that a circle cannot be homeomorphic to an interval such as [0,1], and that a continuous function from [0,1] to the circle has an inverse which is not continuous.
  • #1
camel_jockey
38
0
Hi guys!

Excuse the spam, but I would like to ask something which I read in Armstrongs Basic Topology which I am just not 100% sure about.

He says we wish to define homeomorphism such that a circle cannot be homeomorphic to an interval such as [0,1). A continuous function f : X \mapsto Y is one whose every inverse f^-1(N) (N neighbourhood of a mapped point f(x)) is a neighbourhood in X.

He presents a one-to-one and onto function from [0,1) to the circle

x \mapsto exp ( 2∏i x )

This maps the interval into all of the circle. It has an inverse. Exactly why can one not get a continuous inverse??

I suspect this has something to do with the multi-valued property that the complex LOGARITHM suffers from. But somehow I feel the author does not presume the reader to know this much complex analysis - and that there is a more "primitive" reasons dealing with open sets, neighbourhoods, inverses etc. Is there one? Or is the solution merely that there exists no inverse which is not the logarithm?
 
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  • #2
camel_jockey said:
Hi guys!

Excuse the spam, but I would like to ask something which I read in Armstrongs Basic Topology which I am just not 100% sure about.

He says we wish to define homeomorphism such that a circle cannot be homeomorphic to an interval such as [0,1). A continuous function f : X \mapsto Y is one whose every inverse f^-1(N) (N neighbourhood of a mapped point f(x)) is a neighbourhood in X.

He presents a one-to-one and onto function from [0,1) to the circle

x \mapsto exp ( 2∏i x )

This maps the interval into all of the circle. It has an inverse. Exactly why can one not get a continuous inverse??

I suspect this has something to do with the multi-valued property that the complex LOGARITHM suffers from. But somehow I feel the author does not presume the reader to know this much complex analysis - and that there is a more "primitive" reasons dealing with open sets, neighbourhoods, inverses etc. Is there one? Or is the solution merely that there exists no inverse which is not the logarithm?

the inverse of the function exp(2pix) is not continuous.
 
  • #3
Well, [0,1) is not compact, and S1 is.

Also, separating sets are a homeomorphism invariant, i.e., the
sets that, once removed, disconnect your space. And the interval
can be disconnected with a point, but the circle cannot. IOW, if
S1 is homeo. to some interval , then S1-{pt.}
is homeo. to interval-h(pt.), but one is diconnected (after
removing a point.), and the other is not.
 
  • #4
Actually, the impossibility of even having a continuou bijection between the circle and the real line is equivalent to the impossibility of defining a continuous argument; an argument is precisely a continuous assignment of real values to the points of the circle.
A continuous bijection between S1 compact, and a (Hausdorff) subset of the real line would be a homeo. I have been getting a lot of mileage from this compact-Hausdorff thing recently.
 
  • #5
Thank you for your replies! I am understanding better now!

Bacle said:
Actually, the impossibility of even having a continuou bijection between the circle and the real line is equivalent to the impossibility of defining a continuous argument; an argument is precisely a continuous assignment of real values to the points of the circle.
A continuous bijection between S1 compact, and a (Hausdorff) subset of the real line would be a homeo. I have been getting a lot of mileage from this compact-Hausdorff thing recently.

Any particular books or PDFs you recommend which gave you this point of view?
 
  • #6
Let me think a bit. I think it has mostly been my obsessive web-surfing
on math websites, where I pick things up, and this one being an excellent
one, with great posts from everyone.
 
  • #7
Camel_ Jockey:
I just realized the result you're looking for is part of the
more general result of Borsuk-Ulam theorem:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Borsuk_ulam

Let me know if you want a proof; it should be possible to find one online; I can't think
of a specific book where one could find a proof.
 
  • #8
Great scott! Some fine spotting there...

I recognize the theorem - isn't it in Munkres? I unfortunately don't have that book.

You are probably right but I don't quite understand that the problem would be the antipodal points.

Isnt the problem that the continuous function from the sphere to the line is the logarithm which carries this out

Log z := ln r + iθ = ln | z | + i Arg z.
= i Arg z.

(forget about scaling with 2\pi etc)


Isnt the problem that the point (x,y)=(-1,0) cannot be continuously mapped using the "principal value" of the logarithm?
 
  • #9
camel_jockey said:
Hi guys!

Excuse the spam, but I would like to ask something which I read in Armstrongs Basic Topology which I am just not 100% sure about.

He says we wish to define homeomorphism such that a circle cannot be homeomorphic to an interval such as [0,1). A continuous function f : X \mapsto Y is one whose every inverse f^-1(N) (N neighbourhood of a mapped point f(x)) is a neighbourhood in X.

He presents a one-to-one and onto function from [0,1) to the circle

x \mapsto exp ( 2∏i x )

This maps the interval into all of the circle. It has an inverse. Exactly why can one not get a continuous inverse??

I suspect this has something to do with the multi-valued property that the complex LOGARITHM suffers from. But somehow I feel the author does not presume the reader to know this much complex analysis - and that there is a more "primitive" reasons dealing with open sets, neighbourhoods, inverses etc. Is there one? Or is the solution merely that there exists no inverse which is not the logarithm?

An open neighborhood of 0 in [0,1) is a half open interval. A half open interval is not homeomorphic to an open interval.
 
  • #10
Thanks Lavinia - though how does one most simply see that a circle is a "fully open interval" ?
 
  • #11
camel_jockey said:
Thanks Lavinia - though how does one most simply see that a circle is a "fully open interval" ?

The circle is not a fully open interval but... if there were a homeomorphism from the circle to [0,1) then a small open interval around the point on the circle that is mapped to 0 would be mapped homeomorphically to a half open interval surrounding 0.
 
  • #12
lavinia said:
The circle is not a fully open interval but... if there were a homeomorphism from the circle to [0,1) then a small open interval around the point on the circle that is mapped to 0 would be mapped homeomorphically to a half open interval surrounding 0.
So I gather that you mean that the circle is not an open set? How would one motivate this (intuitively I know you are correct of course) ?

Does this depend on the topology you CHOOSE, and moreover, does it depend if the circle manifold is chosen to be some SUBSET of R^n ? (we assume that there is no distance-function)
 
  • #13
camel_jockey said:
So I gather that you mean that the circle is not an open set? How would one motivate this (intuitively I know you are correct of course) ?

The circle is not an open interval not a half open interval not a closed interval. Intuitively the circle has no end point yet the closed and half closed intervals do. This is enough to differentiate them topologically.

Does this depend on the topology you CHOOSE, and moreover, does it depend if the circle manifold is chosen to be some SUBSET of R^n ? (we assume that there is no distance-function)

yes the topology matters. But then the circle would not be the circle but just a set. Circle means with its manifold topology.

If you give the circle and the half open interval the discrete topology then they are homeomorphic and the exponential mapping you gave above is a homeomorphism.
 
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  • #14
My point was that if the circle was homeomorphic to an interval, then S1 could be embedded in the real line, and Borsuk-Ulam shows it cannot. I just thought to give a more general result about Sn and Rn, so an obstruction is that in any candidate for an embedding, (at least) two points will map to the same point.
 
  • #15
Bacle said:
My point was that if the circle was homeomorphic to an interval, then S1 could be embedded in the real line, and Borsuk-Ulam shows it cannot. I just thought to give a more general result about Sn and Rn, so an obstruction is that in any candidate for an embedding, (at least) two points will map to the same point.

Borsuk Ulam works.

One could also use the first homotopy groups of the circle and the interval.
 
  • #16
It seems to me that this problem boils down to the Intermediate Value Theorem.

Let g be a continuous surjective map from the circle to [0,1).
Parameterize the circle by a map,f, from the closed interval ,[0,1], so that f(0) is mapped to 0 by g. Since f(1) = f(0) and g is surjective, gof must return to zero and thus can not be 1-1.
 
  • #17
But there cannot be a continuous surjection , because the circle is compact, and the interval [0,1) is not, so f(S1)=[a,b], since the compact subsets of the real line are the closed+bounded intervals, and f continuous maps compact to compact.
 
  • #18
Bacle said:
But there cannot be a continuous surjection , because the circle is compact, and the interval [0,1) is not, so f(S1)=[a,b], since the compact subsets of the real line are the closed+bounded intervals, and f continuous maps compact to compact.

yeah but it doesn't matter. The argument works for a non-constant continuous map. Use the same construction for any point in the image of g.
 

1. Why can't a circle and a real interval be homeomorphic?

A circle is a closed, continuous curve with no endpoints, while a real interval is a line segment with two distinct endpoints. These two shapes have different topological properties and cannot be transformed into each other without breaking their fundamental characteristics.

2. What is homeomorphism?

Homeomorphism is a mathematical concept that describes a continuous and bijective mapping between two topological spaces. This means that there is a one-to-one correspondence between points in the two spaces, and the structure of the spaces is preserved.

3. Can a circle and a real interval be deformed into each other?

No, a circle and a real interval cannot be continuously deformed into each other without changing their fundamental properties. A circle has a hole in the middle, while a real interval does not, making them topologically different.

4. How do we know that a circle and a real interval are not homeomorphic?

One way to prove that two shapes are not homeomorphic is by showing that at least one topological property is different between them. In the case of a circle and a real interval, we can see that the circle is compact (closed and bounded) while the real interval is not, which is a topological invariant.

5. Can a circle and a real interval be homeomorphic in some other dimension?

No, a circle and a real interval cannot be homeomorphic in any dimension. Homeomorphisms preserve topological properties, and since a circle and a real interval have different topological properties in 2D, they cannot be homeomorphic in any other dimension.

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