If p is a covering map with B compact and fiber of b finite, E compact

EgoKilla
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Homework Statement


Let p: E \rightarrow B be a covering map.

If B is compact andp^{-1}(b) is finite for each b in B, then E compact.

Note: This is a problem from Munkres pg 341, question 6b in section 54.

The Attempt at a Solution



I begin with a cover of E denote it \{U_\alpha\}.

I want to reduce this to a finite subcover (thus showing that E is compact).

First I use the fact that p is a covering map and thus open to send this cover of E to a cover of B.

Denote the image of \{U_\alpha\} under p by \{W_\alpha\}

Then since B is compact I can reduce this to a finite subcover: \cup_{i=1}^n W_i.

Here is where I get stuck, I'm not sure how to send this finite subcover of B back over to E. I'm not even sure if I'm going about this the right way.

Any help is greatly appreciated, thanks.
 
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The natural thing to do is of course looking at ##p^{-1}(W_i)##. The problem is that

U_i\subseteq p^{-1}(W_i)

and equality does not hold in general because ##p## is not injective. So maybe you can do something with the fact that ##p## is a local homeomorphism and that it has finite fibers.

One thing I would do is first to replace the ##U_i## by a cover of smaller sets ##V_j## such that ##p:V_j\rightarrow p(V_j)## is a homeomorphism between open sets. Then think about how you can write ##p^{-1}(p(V_j))##.
 
Why are we allowed to replace the U_\alpha by a smaller cover? But then once we have that it's just as simple as saying we can reduce the V_j to a finite subcover since after we map them to B we can take a finite subcover of them and map them back using p^-1 since each open set in the image is then homeomorphic to its pre-image?
 
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EgoKilla said:
Why are we allowed to replace the U_\alpha by a smaller cover?

First try to obtain a finite cover of the ##V_j##. Then you can use that ##V_j\subseteq U_\alpha## for some ##\alpha## to obtain a finite cover of the ##U_\alpha##.

By the way, in topology we call the ##V_j## a refinement of the ##U_\alpha##. The fact that the ##V_j## has a finite subcover can then be stated as "Every open cover has a finite open refinement". This statement is equivalent to compactness.

But then once we have that it's just as simple as saying we can reduce the V_j to a finite subcover since after we map them to B we can take a finite subcover of them and map them back using p^-1 since each open set in the image is then homeomorphic to its pre-image?

Are you using that ##p^{-1}(p(V_j)) = V_j##? This is still not true. It is only true for injective maps. However, because you are dealing with a covering map, you can write ##p^{-1}(p(V_j))## in a better and more convenient form.
 
Sorry, I'm still confused about why we're even allowed to replace U_\alpha by the V_j at all.

We can write p^{-1}(p(V_j)) as a disjoint union of open sets in E, each of which maps homeomorphically to p(V_j). But this must be finite because of the finiteness of the fibers?
 
EgoKilla said:
Sorry, I'm still confused about why we're even allowed to replace U_\alpha by the V_j at all.

Yes, that is something you should think about.

We can write p^{-1}(p(V_j)) as a disjoint union of open sets in E, each of which maps homeomorphically to p(V_j). But this must be finite because of the finiteness of the fibers?

Yes, even better: we can write ##p^{-1}(p(V_j))## as the finite union of some ##V_i##. So there exist a finite set ##I## such that

p^{-1}(p(V_j)) = \bigcup_{i\in I} V_i

Using this, can you then find a open cover of the ##V_j## and hence of the ##U_\alpha##?
 
I'm honestly so lost.
 
EgoKilla said:
I'm honestly so lost.

You've done most of the proof! Where are you lost?
 
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