Are all continuous bijections homeomorphisms?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers on whether all continuous bijections between metric spaces are homeomorphisms, specifically examining the continuity of inverse functions. Participants explore examples and counterexamples, as well as conditions under which continuous bijections may or may not have continuous inverses.

Discussion Character

  • Debate/contested
  • Technical explanation
  • Mathematical reasoning

Main Points Raised

  • One participant questions if the inverse of a continuous bijection must be continuous, suggesting that the existence of a continuous bijection does not imply homeomorphism.
  • Another participant provides a counterexample using the discrete topology on R, noting that while the function is bijective and continuous, its inverse is not continuous in the Euclidean topology.
  • A standard counterexample involving the map from [0,1) to S^1 is mentioned, with a follow-up question regarding its injectivity.
  • Participants discuss the periodic nature of the counterexample and the implications for injectivity, prompting further exploration of distinct values in the interval.
  • One participant suggests proving that a continuous bijection is a homeomorphism under specific conditions (compactness and Hausdorff property).
  • Another participant elaborates on the behavior of the inverse function in the context of the S^1 example, highlighting discontinuities.
  • Several participants reference standard examples of bijective morphisms that are isomorphisms in certain contexts, while also noting cases where bijective maps do not yield isomorphisms.
  • There is a request for clarification on the implications of category theory in relation to the examples discussed.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express disagreement regarding the continuity of inverses of continuous bijections, with multiple counterexamples and conditions presented. The discussion remains unresolved as participants explore various viewpoints and examples.

Contextual Notes

Participants highlight specific conditions under which continuous bijections may or may not be homeomorphisms, including topological properties of the spaces involved. The discussion includes references to injectivity and continuity that are not fully resolved.

Who May Find This Useful

Readers interested in topology, particularly those exploring the properties of continuous functions, bijections, and homeomorphisms in metric spaces.

lugita15
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If f is a continuous bijection from a metric space M to a metric space N, is the inverse function of f necessarily continuous?

My intuition tells me no; it seems like there could be a continuous bijection f whose inverse exists but is not continuous. Intuitively, I see two spaces being homeomorphic as a stronger condition than the existence of a continuous bijection between them.

I tried proving that the inverse of f must be continuous, but I couldn't.

Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Thank you in advance.
 
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No, take f : R discrete -> R Euclidean which maps x -> x, then f is obviously bijective, and it's continuous because every set is open in the domain, but for the inverse function, the pre-image of a singleton set is a singleton set which is not open in the euclidean topology.
 
The standard counter-example is the map [0,1)->S^1 given by t\mapsto \exp(2\pi i t).
 
You might like to prove the following: let X be compact and Y Hausdorff, then if f:X\rightarrow Y is bijective and continuous, then it is a homeomorphism.
 
Landau said:
The standard counter-example is the map [0,1)->S^1 given by t\mapsto \exp(2\pi i t).
Is that a bijection? Isn't this function periodic, and hence not one-to-one?
 
Instead of asking, try to prove it yourself. To prove that it would not be injective, you need to find distinct t_1 and t_2 in [0,1) such that f(t_1)=f(t_2) (if I call the function f). Can you find them?
 
Landau said:
Instead of asking, try to prove it yourself. To prove that it would not be injective, you need to find distinct t_1 and t_2 in [0,1) such that f(t_1)=f(t_2) (if I call the function f). Can you find them?
f(0)=1, f(1)=1
 
With [0,1) I meant the interval EXcluding 1, i.e.

[0,1):=\{x\in\mathbb{R}: 0\leq x<1\}.
 
Landau said:
With [0,1) I meant the interval EXcluding 1, i.e.

[0,1):=\{x\in\mathbb{R}: 0\leq x<1\}.
Oh sorry, I didn't notice you had restricted the domain.
 
  • #10
Well, that is the point of this example: the inverse of this map sends the point 1 (of the complex unit circle S^1) to 0, and and the point just 'below' 1 to 1-e for small e. In other words, the inverse 'jumps' from values arbitrarily close to 1, to 0. Hence is not continuous.
 
  • #11
there are several standard examples where bijective morphisms are isomorphisms: vector spaces, banach spaces, compact hausdorff spaces, groups, rings, normal algebraic varieties.

These give rise to some examples of bijective maps which may not be isomorphisms: singular algebraic curves, and arbitrary topological spaces.
 
  • #12
mathwonk said:
there are several standard examples where bijective morphisms are isomorphisms: vector spaces, banach spaces, compact hausdorff spaces, groups, rings, normal algebraic varieties.

These give rise to some examples of bijective maps which may not be isomorphisms: singular algebraic curves, and arbitrary topological spaces.
I don't really understand what you're saying, although I gather it has something to do with category theory. Anyway, does what you said lead to additional examples of continuous bijections between metric spaces whose inverses are not continuous?
 

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