Is empty set open?bounded?perfect?compact?

  • Thread starter kntsy
  • Start date
  • Tags
    Empty Set
In summary: It is only false when p is true and q is false.So, take M to be any postive number you like and the statement "if x and y are in A, then d(x,y)< M" is true since x and y cannot both be in A if A is empty. Let us review the definitions:A set is open if every point is interior point but empty set has no point! So no?In summary, a set is open if every point is an interior point. However, the empty set does not have any points, so it is not open.Bounded means that there is a real number and a point in the set such that the distance between any two points in the set is less than
  • #1
kntsy
82
0
open? A set is open if every point is interior point but empty set has no point! So no?

bounded?no point so cannot measure distance?so no?

perfect? i guess no because there is no point in empty set.

compact?There is no open cover "covering" the empty set right? so no?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
kntsy said:
open? A set is open if every point is interior point but empty set has no point! So no?
If there aren't any of them, then obviously all of them are interior points!

If you have trouble with universal quantification over the empty set, you will probably have no trouble understanding the negation.

A set is not open (relative to a given topology) if and only if there exists a point in it that is not an interior point.
 
  • #3
kntsy said:
compact?There is no open cover "covering" the empty set right?
There is, namely the cover consisting of the empty set (but for this you need that the empty set is open, which Hurkyl just explained.) More generally, every finite space is compact (and even more generally, every space with finitely many open sets is compact).
 
  • #4
Landau said:
There is, namely the cover consisting of the empty set (but for this you need that the empty set is open, which Hurkyl just explained.) More generally, every finite space is compact (and even more generally, every space with finitely many open sets is compact).

Thanks for the reply? How about bounded? Distance cannot be measured for empty set!
 
  • #5
kntsy said:
Distance cannot be measured for empty set!
Write out precisely the definition of a set being bounded.
 
  • #6
Landau said:
Write out precisely the definition of a set being bounded.

E is bounded if there is a real number M and a point q[itex]\in[/itex]X such that d(p,q)<M for all p[itex]\in[/itex]E

But there is no point in empty set so how can d(p,q) be defined?
 
  • #7
The metric d is a function [tex]X\times X\to\mathbb{R}[/tex]. If X is empty, this is the (unique) empty function.
 
  • #8
Landau said:
The metric d is a function [tex]X\times X\to\mathbb{R}[/tex]. If X is empty, this is the (unique) empty function.

Empty function? What is its image? I guess it can be any number?
However, how can we know whether the image of the empty function is smaller than M? The image can be assigned whatever number so can be very big even infinity?
Thanks.
 
  • #9
The image is empty. Formally, since a function is a relation, you can view it as the the empty relation
[tex]\emptyset\subseteq (X\times X)\times\mathbb{R}.[/tex]
Now X is bounded if there exist M>0 and [tex]q\in X[/tex] such that, for all [tex]p\in X[/tex], [tex]d(p,q)<M[/tex]. But there is no such q!
 
  • #10
Landau said:
The image is empty. Formally, since a function is a relation, you can view it as the the empty relation
[tex]\emptyset\subseteq (X\times X)\times\mathbb{R}.[/tex]
Now X is bounded if there exist M>0 and [tex]q\in X[/tex] such that, for all [tex]p\in X[/tex], [tex]d(p,q)<M[/tex]. But there is no such q!

I start seeing the picture now but i still do not understand why "empty<M" is wrong. Empty means nothing so "nothing" is smaller than "something"?
I also wonder if the empty set is unbounded because "there does not exist q"?!??
 
  • #11
I agree it's a bit tricky. You could also say that X is bounded if there exist M>0 such that for all [tex]p,q\in X[/tex], [tex]d(p,q)<M[/tex]. With this definition the empty set is bounded.

Or put another way, we can regard X, the empty set, as a subset of any (non-empty) metric space, say [itex]\mathbb{R}[/itex]. Then X is bounded if it is contained in some ball of radius>0. But certainly X is contained in, say, the ball [tex](-1,1)[/tex] of radius 1 centered at 0.
 
  • #12
Landau said:
I agree it's a bit tricky. You could also say that X is bounded if there exist M>0 such that for all [tex]p,q\in X[/tex], [tex]d(p,q)<M[/tex]. With this definition the empty set is bounded.

Or put another way, we can regard X, the empty set, as a subset of any (non-empty) metric space, say [itex]\mathbb{R}[/itex]. Then X is bounded if it is contained in some ball of radius>0. But certainly X is contained in, say, the ball [tex](-1,1)[/tex] of radius 1 centered at 0.

So a set can be bounded and unbounded at the same time? However, we know that empty set is compact. Doesn't it imply that the implication compact->closed and bounded does not work?

Thanks Landau.
 
  • #13
kntsy said:
So a set can be bounded and unbounded at the same time? However, we know that empty set is compact. Doesn't it imply that the implication compact->closed and bounded does not work?

Thanks Landau.
No, no one here has said that the empty set is unbounded.

A set, A, in a metric space, is bounded if there exist a number, M> 0 such that "if x and y are in A, then d(x,y)< M". If A is empty, take M to be any positive number at all then the statement "if x and y are in A, then d(x,y)< M" is TRUE because it is an "if then" statement in which the hypothesis "if x and y are in A" if FALSE.

p=> q is true when p is false, whether q is true or not.
 

Is empty set open?

No, the empty set is not considered open because it does not contain any points and therefore cannot contain a neighborhood around any of its points.

Is empty set bounded?

Yes, the empty set is considered bounded because it does not contain any points and therefore has no maximum or minimum distance between its points.

Is empty set perfect?

No, the empty set is not considered perfect because it does not contain any accumulation points, which are necessary for a set to be considered perfect.

Is empty set compact?

Yes, the empty set is considered compact because it is both closed and bounded, and it is the only set that satisfies these two properties.

Is empty set connected?

No, the empty set is not considered connected because it does not contain any points and therefore cannot be split into two non-empty sets that are both open and closed.

Similar threads

  • Calculus
Replies
3
Views
1K
Replies
9
Views
407
  • Calculus
Replies
1
Views
80
Replies
10
Views
1K
  • Topology and Analysis
Replies
5
Views
173
Replies
3
Views
832
  • Topology and Analysis
Replies
32
Views
2K
Replies
5
Views
1K
Replies
2
Views
332
  • Calculus
Replies
1
Views
1K
Back
Top