Hausdorff property of projective space

In summary, the authors of "Differential Geometry and Mathematical Physics" by Rudolph and Schmidt provide an example of a manifold, specifically a projective space. However, there appears to be a typo in the book where the maximum is used instead of the minimum in the definition of a neighborhood. The authors also do not provide a specific definition for the set ##\mathbb{K}_1##, but it is assumed to be equal to ##\mathbb{K}^1_1##. This example is further discussed by the conversation participants, with one providing a clearer visualization of projective space as a quotient of the unit sphere. The conversation ends with the suggestion that this idea could potentially be applied to other quotients as well.
  • #1
Korybut
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2
Hello!

I am reading "Differential Geometry and Mathematical Physics" by Rudolph and Schmidt. And they have and example of manifold (projective space). I believe that there is a typo in the book, but perhaps I miss something deep.
Definitions are the following
$$\mathbb{K}^n_\ast=\{\mathbf{x}\in \mathbb{K}^n : \mathbf{x}\neq 0\},\;\; \mathbb{K}^n_1=\{\mathbf{x}\in \mathbb{K} : \| x \|=1\}$$

They pick up two representatives ##\mathbf{x}\neq \mathbf{y}## both with unit norm ##\| \mathbf{x}\|=\|\mathbf{y}\|=1## in ##\mathbf{K}^{n+1}_\ast##

To proceed with the neighborhoods they define function
$$l(\mathbf{x},\mathbf{y}):=\min_{\lambda \in \mathbb{K}_1} \|\mathbf{x} \lambda-\mathbf{y}\|$$
Then the pre-images of the neighborhoods are defined as follows
$$K_{\mathbf{x}}:=\{ \mathbf{z}\in \mathbb{K}^{n+1}_\ast : \max_{\lambda \in \mathbb{K}_1} \| \frac{\mathbf{z}}{\|\mathbf{z}\|}\lambda-\mathbf{x}\|<\frac{1}{2} l(\mathbf{x},\mathbf{y})\} \in \mathbb{K}^{n+1}_\ast$$

I've considered the case ##\mathbb{K}=\mathbb{R}## and ##\mathbb{R}P^1##. Then there are only two possibilities for ##\lambda=\pm 1##. And I found that set ##K_{\mathbf{x}}## is simply empty. This ##\max## in definition of ##K_{\mathbf{x}}## looks like a typo. Am I right?
 
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  • #2
For ##\mathbb RP^1## you need ##\mathbb K^2=\mathbb R^2##.
 
  • #3
martinbn said:
For ##\mathbb RP^1## you need ##\mathbb K^2=\mathbb R^2##.
I do take ##\mathbb{R}^2##.

Suppose
$$\mathbf{x}=\left(\begin{matrix} 1 \\ 0 \end{matrix}\right),\;\; \mathbf{y}=\left(\begin{matrix} 0 \\ 1 \end{matrix} \right)$$
then this ##l## function is equal to ##\sqrt{2}##. On the other hand ##\max## in the definition of ##K_{\mathbf{x}}## takes values in ##[\sqrt{2},2]## for all possible choices of ##\mathbf{z}##. There is no way it can be less then ##\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}##.
 
  • #4
That doesn't seem wrong to me. I think the neighborhood you are describing around ##x## is all lines that make at most a 90 degree angle with it. But every line makes at most a 90 degree angle (since both sides of the line map to the same point in protective space)

Edit: whoops, you said the set is empty, not everything. Ignore this
 
  • #5
Korybut said:
I do take ##\mathbb{R}^2##.

Suppose
$$\mathbf{x}=\left(\begin{matrix} 1 \\ 0 \end{matrix}\right),\;\; \mathbf{y}=\left(\begin{matrix} 0 \\ 1 \end{matrix} \right)$$
then this ##l## function is equal to ##\sqrt{2}##. On the other hand ##\max## in the definition of ##K_{\mathbf{x}}## takes values in ##[\sqrt{2},2]## for all possible choices of ##\mathbf{z}##. There is no way it can be less then ##\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}##.
I see, you meant the the field is the reals.

It does look suspicious. What do they mean by ##\mathbb K_1##? Is it ##\mathbb K^n_1## for ##n=1## or something else?
 
  • #6
Authors did not provide any specific definition for ##\mathbb{K}_1## so I think ##\mathbb{K}_1=\mathbb{K}_1^1##.
I believe it should be ##\min## in the definition of ##K_{\mathbf{x}}##.
 
  • #7
Korybut said:
Hello!

I am reading "Differential Geometry and Mathematical Physics" by Rudolph and Schmidt. And they have and example of manifold (projective space). I believe that there is a typo in the book, but perhaps I miss something deep.
Definitions are the following
$$\mathbb{K}^n_\ast=\{\mathbf{x}\in \mathbb{K}^n : \mathbf{x}\neq 0\},\;\; \mathbb{K}^n_1=\{\mathbf{x}\in \mathbb{K} : \| x \|=1\}$$

They pick up two representatives ##\mathbf{x}\neq \mathbf{y}## both with unit norm ##\| \mathbf{x}\|=\|\mathbf{y}\|=1## in ##\mathbf{K}^{n+1}_\ast##

To proceed with the neighborhoods they define function
$$l(\mathbf{x},\mathbf{y}):=\min_{\lambda \in \mathbb{K}_1} \|\mathbf{x} \lambda-\mathbf{y}\|$$
Then the pre-images of the neighborhoods are defined as follows
$$K_{\mathbf{x}}:=\{ \mathbf{z}\in \mathbb{K}^{n+1}_\ast : \max_{\lambda \in \mathbb{K}_1} \| \frac{\mathbf{z}}{\|\mathbf{z}\|}\lambda-\mathbf{x}\|<\frac{1}{2} l(\mathbf{x},\mathbf{y})\} \in \mathbb{K}^{n+1}_\ast$$

I've considered the case ##\mathbb{K}=\mathbb{R}## and ##\mathbb{R}P^1##. Then there are only two possibilities for ##\lambda=\pm 1##. And I found that set ##K_{\mathbf{x}}## is simply empty. This ##\max## in definition of ##K_{\mathbf{x}}## looks like a typo. Am I right?
 
  • #8
yes "max" seems to be a typo, and should have been "min" as you say. the mysterious K1 is apparently meant to be the non zero scalars, or even just plus and minus 1 will do, I think. The point is to take a nbhd consisting of points represented by vectors on a line which is near the given representative. There are many representatives of each "point", so measure nearness by the nearest one. They have essentially said, given two unit length representatives x,y, of points p,q, define their distance d as the closest distance between y and any representative of the point p. (Odd that they choose an asymmetric looking, but not actually asymmetric, definition). Then take as neighborhood of p, any point having a representative closer to x than half of that distance. Or, since they have stated it in terms of representatives, take as neighborhood preimage, any representative z such that the closest point of the line through z, is closer to x than d/2.

This is about as unintuitive and cloaked a description as I have ever seen. Since points are lines, they could have just defined the distance between two points p,q as the minimum distance d between any two unit length representatives of these two lines, then defined the neighborhood of one point p, to be all lines closer to p, in this sense, than d/2.

I think this is right, a least without spending any more time on it, and that you have already understood it correctly.

Annoying typos like that are made more likely when the writing is so unclear and unfriendly to the reader. I.e. then even the proof reader, and the authors themselves, cannot get it right. On the other hand, they wopuld probably appreciate a remark from you correcting their error, as writing a readable book is extremely challenging.
 
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  • #9
Maybe there is a point-set theorem out there on when quotients respect the Hausdorff property.
 
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  • #10
I suspect the OP does not need any help, but since this has been on my mind, I wish to get it off. The simplest way to visualize the projective space as a manifold is to represent each point of projective space as a pair of antipodal points of the unit sphere. As WWGD suggests, this represents projective space as a quotient of the unit sphere by an action of the group Z/2Z. An epsilon ball around a point of projective space is then given by a pair of epsilon balls, one around each antipodal point. Then since it is obvious that any finite number of points of the sphere possesses disjoint epsilon balls, one sees that given any two pairs of antipodal points, there is an epsilon such that all 4 epsilon balls centered at these points are disjoint. Hence it is obvious that projective space is hausdorff, and a manifold too.

edit: To consider the idea of WWGD, indeed it seems plausible that any quotient of a hausdorff manifold by a finite group of automorphisms (homeomorphisms) is a hausdorff space, and if the action is without fixed points, is also locally euclidean, hence a hausdorff manifold.
 
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1. What is the Hausdorff property of projective space?

The Hausdorff property of projective space refers to the topological property of a space in which any two distinct points can be separated by disjoint open sets. In other words, for any two points in projective space, there exists an open set containing one point that does not contain the other point.

2. Why is the Hausdorff property important in projective space?

The Hausdorff property is important in projective space because it guarantees that the space is well-behaved and allows for a variety of topological and geometric constructions. It also ensures that the space is Tychonoff, meaning that it is completely regular and Hausdorff.

3. How is the Hausdorff property related to compactness?

The Hausdorff property is closely related to compactness in projective space. In fact, a space is compact if and only if it is Hausdorff and satisfies the first countability axiom. This means that the Hausdorff property is a necessary condition for compactness.

4. Can projective space have the Hausdorff property if it is not compact?

Yes, it is possible for projective space to have the Hausdorff property without being compact. For example, the real projective space, which is a compact space, has the Hausdorff property. However, the complex projective space, which is not compact, also has the Hausdorff property.

5. Are there any other topological properties related to the Hausdorff property in projective space?

Yes, there are several other topological properties that are related to the Hausdorff property in projective space. These include being normal, paracompact, and metrizable. All of these properties are satisfied by projective space, making it a well-behaved and versatile topological space.

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