Finding topologies of sets in complex space

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Homework Statement



Consider the following subsets of \mathbb{C}, whose
descriptions are given in polar coordinates. (Take r \geq 0 in
this question.)
<br /> \begin{align*}<br /> X_1 =&amp; \{ (r,\theta) | r = 1 \} \\<br /> X_2 =&amp; \{ (r,\theta) | r &lt; 1 \} \\<br /> X_3 =&amp; \{ (r,\theta) | 0 &lt; \theta &lt; \pi, r &gt; 0 \} \\<br /> X_4 =&amp; \{ (r,\theta) | r = \cos 2\theta \}<br /> \end{align*}<br />
Give each set the usual topology inherited from \mathcal{C}.
Which, if any, of these sets are homeomorphic?

Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution



\tau_1 = \varnothing. \tau_2 = \{ B(z,r&#039;) \cap X_2 | r&#039;<br /> &gt; 0 \}. \tau_3 = \{ B(z,r&#039;) \cap X_3 | r&#039; &gt; 0 \}. \tau_4 =<br /> \varnothing.

X_2 is homeomorphic.

Are my answers correct? I am not sure if the topologies I wrote make sense at all.
 
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Do you even understand what the words you are using mean?

It makes no sense to say that "X_2 is homeomorphic". The word "homeomorphic" does not apply to a single set. Two sets are "homeomorphic" is one can be continuously changed into the other. That is, we can shrink, stretch, or otherwise deform a set but we cannot cut, tear, or otherwise break it. In particular, you cannot change the dimension of a set and you cannot change the number of times it intersects itself. While you can change the size of a set with a "continuous" transformation, you cannot change whether it is bounded or not.

Do you mean \tau_1, \tau_2, \tau_3, \tau_4 to be the topologies on each of these sets? If so, \tau_1 and \tau_4 are certainly incorrect! A topology must include the entire set and the empty set at least so a toplogy is never empty. In any case, it is not necessary to write out the topologies- they are just the usual topology on R^2 restricted to the given set.

X_1 is the circle with center at (0, 0) and radius 1. It is a one dimensional closed path.

X_2 is the disk with center at (0, 0) and radius 1. it is a two dimensional, bounded, set.

X_3 is the upper half plane. It is two dimsensional and unbounded.

X_4 is a "four petal rose". It is one dimensional and intersects itself.

Which, if any, of those sets are homeomorphic to each other?
 
HallsofIvy said:
Do you even understand what the words you are using mean?

It makes no sense to say that "X_2 is homeomorphic". The word "homeomorphic" does not apply to a single set. Two sets are "homeomorphic" is one can be continuously changed into the other. That is, we can shrink, stretch, or otherwise deform a set but we cannot cut, tear, or otherwise break it. In particular, you cannot change the dimension of a set and you cannot change the number of times it intersects itself. While you can change the size of a set with a "continuous" transformation, you cannot change whether it is bounded or not.

Do you mean \tau_1, \tau_2, \tau_3, \tau_4 to be the topologies on each of these sets? If so, \tau_1 and \tau_4 are certainly incorrect! A topology must include the entire set and the empty set at least so a toplogy is never empty. In any case, it is not necessary to write out the topologies- they are just the usual topology on R^2 restricted to the given set.

X_1 is the circle with center at (0, 0) and radius 1. It is a one dimensional closed path.

X_2 is the disk with center at (0, 0) and radius 1. it is a two dimensional, bounded, set.

X_3 is the upper half plane. It is two dimsensional and unbounded.

X_4 is a "four petal rose". It is one dimensional and intersects itself.

Which, if any, of those sets are homeomorphic to each other?

Thank you very much for detailed explanation about homeomorphic sets. I did not know those rules and thought the question is asking which set is homeomorphic to the complex space \mathbb{C}.

None of these sets are homeomorphic to each other. Is it correct?
 
Yes, that is correct.
 
I think X2 and X3 are homeomorphic.
 
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