Topology Problem: Homeomorphism in R^n Subspaces

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In summary: 1 times.but if the map misses the origin, then the image of the boundary circle cannot be a simple closed curve, because any simple closed curve misses a point, and the winding number is zero, but this map misses no points. contradiction.so it is impossible for the map to miss the origin.now what about points close to the origin, but not on the boundary circle. well, it is possible they are not in the image, but the "winding number" must be the same. one way to argue this is that the image of the circle of radius r, must lie within a distance of r of the image of the center point, and if the winding number is not one, then the image
  • #1
kakarukeys
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Given a homeomorphism from a subspace of [tex]R^n[/tex] onto a subspace of [tex]R^n[/tex]

if one of the subspaces is open in [tex]R^n[/tex], is the other one open in [tex]R^n[/tex] too?

I know it is trivial, but I can't see any solution.
 
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  • #2
its not trivial. very much not so. at least in my non topologist opinion.

for example just try to prove there is no homeomorphism from R^3 to R^4,

or even S^2 to S^3.

or even S^1 to S^2.

just try to prove that every loop on S^2 can be shrunk to a point.
 
  • #3
I don't even think it's true. But of course I've only taken one introductory class so...
 
  • #4
well, you are still entitled to your opinion. now what is it based on? do you have an idea for a counterexample?

now ask yourself what about R^1? is an oen interval homeomorphic to something else in the real line?

now think about R^2. let D be an open disc centered at 0. a homeo maps 0 say to 0. now what does it do to a small circle around 0? does it map to a small loop arounmd the image 0? if not what else could happen?

if it mapped to a loop that did not surround 0, then as you shrink the circle wouldn't it shrink along a cone of circles down to 0 and become non injective at some point?

i.e. i claim an injective continuous map from an open disc in R^2, to R^2 must map to an open nbhd of every image point.

now apply the same reasoning to an open ball in R^3 mapping to R^3. etc...
 
  • #5
I understand the argument.
I don't see how it helps to solve the problem.
 
  • #6
the point is to show that the image of an injective continuous map from an open disc, con tains an open nbhd of every image point. that is awhat i am arguing, albeit intuitively.
 
  • #7
yes, how do you arrive at this statement from the previous one (about the loops around 0)
 
  • #8
kakarukeys said:
Given a homeomorphism from a subspace of [tex]R^n[/tex] onto a subspace of [tex]R^n[/tex]

if one of the subspaces is open in [tex]R^n[/tex], is the other one open in [tex]R^n[/tex] too?

I know it is trivial, but I can't see any solution.

Since it's a homeomorphism onto, therefore continuous onto, take the image subspace and suppose it's open, then by continuity its pre-image under the function is open too. But that's the source subspace! So that proves the statement one way. What property of a homeomorphism can you use to prove it the other way?
 
  • #9
self adjoint, it seems you are making the mistake of forgetting that openness is a relative concept. i.e. you are not proving the source space is open in R^n, only that it is open in itself, which is a trivial fact.


as to the OP, if you have an injective continuous map from an open disc D centered at A, to R^2, and A goes to B, then in order to show the image of the disc contains an open nbhd of B, the first observation is that it suffices to show that some circle centered at A has image which "winds around B".


once you realize this, you ask yourself what would happen if the image of every circle failed to do so, or in fact even if the image of one circle failed to do so. then the image of A and this circle, would look like B and a loop that does not have B in its interior.


now look at smaller and smaller circles around A and ask where they go? they must go to smaller and smaller circles NOT encircling B. but it is plausible to imagine that as these image circle shrink down to B without ever enclosing it, that their images must overlap one another, hence the map is not injective.

this is just an intuitive argument, and indeed this is not at all easy to prove. indeed even if we assume more, that the map is injective and continuously differentiable with invertible derivative everywhere, this is the main step in the proof of the inverse function theorem.

there however we can use the derivative to show that every point nearer to B than to the image f(C) of the boundary circle C of D, is in the image of f. i.e. take a point Q close to B. then someif f(y) is not equal to Q, then by the basic principle of derivatives vanishing at minima, the derivative of f at y is zero, a contradiction.

a nice source for the differentiable case is spivaks calculus on manifolds, inverse function theorem.

for the continuous case you coulds use the jordan curve theorem to tell you that the image of the boundary circle C is a simple closed curve f(C) which separates the plane into two connected components, both open, an inside and an outseid, and that f(C) winds exactly once around each inside point. then it follows from the principle mentioned above that f(D) must map homeomorphically onto the inside component of f(C) which is open.
 
  • #10
Does this work?

Let [tex]f: A \rightarrow B[/tex],a homeomorphism.

Let [tex]g:A \rightarrow R^n[/tex] be the extension map of [tex]f[/tex].

Let [tex]h:B \rightarrow R^n[/tex] be the extension map of [tex]f^{-1}[/tex].

As extensions of codomains of contiuous functions, g and h are continuous.

Assume A is open in [tex]R^n[/tex]. Then B is open since h is continuous. Assume B is open, then A is open since g is continuous.
 
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  • #11
Actually I was asking

in order to show the image of the disc contains an open nbhd of B, the first observation is that it suffices to show that some circle centered at A has image which "winds around B".

Why??
 
  • #12
winding number is a deformation invariant, so if the map from the disc to the plane misses the origin, then the boundary circle winds around the origin the same number of times as the image of the center point does, namely zero.
 
  • #13
:confused: :confused: :confused:
You didn't get my question.
 
  • #14
i answered the contrapositive of your question. i.e. you asked me to explain why a map sends a disc is onto a nbhd of B, if the boundary of the disc winds around B. I showed that if the maps does not hit a point, then the boundary does not wind around that point.

now suppose the boundary does wind aropund B, then it also winds around all points near B, and thus by the contrapositive of what I proved, it also maps onto all points near B.

i.e. in logic, "C implies D" is equivalent to "not D implies not C", also called "proof by contradiction".
 
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  • #15
Nice explanation. I seem to understand.

But I have a question

Suppose I have a circle surrounding A, mapped to a loop "winding around" B.
(A mapped to B).

I agree that if the loop winds around B, then the loop winds around the nearby points of B (i.e. a small open nbhd of B).

But are these nearby points of B in the image of the map?
Remember the map is from a subspace to a subspace not the whole of R^n.

I argue that the interior of the circle might get mapped into the interior of the loop (BUT not onto the interior of the loop), so the image migh not be open.
 
  • #16
i have already argued this but maybe too briefly. here it is again:

lets prove by contradiction that the map does map onto every point the loop winds around. we prove it by contradiction. i.e. we will prove that any point not in the image of the map cannot be wound around by the loop.

suppose Q is a point that is not hit by the image of the disc. then the center misses Q, and thus any small circle near the center fails to wind around Q. now winding number about Q varies continuously as we move out along larger and larger circles (since Q is not in the image of any of the circles), but it is also an integer, so it remains constant namely zero ("winding number is a deformation invariant").

thus the winding number of the outer circle, i.e. the image loop, is the same wrt Q as the winding number of the inner "circle", i.e. the center, namely zero.

so we have argued that if Q is not in the image of the disc, then the loop whicxh is the image of the outer circle, does not wind around Q. hence vice versa, if the outer loop does wind around Q, then Q must be in the image of the disc.


these arguments are not trivial, and completely rigorous ones take a lot of work, as i said in the very beginning. but this is an intuitive argument that explains the main features.
 
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  • #17
:smile: :cool: :approve:
Clear

Another question, your proof seems to depend on circles and loops.

take the homeomorphism to be from an open disc of [tex]R^n[/tex] to a subspace of [tex]R^n[/tex]

How do you prove that the other subspace is open? As you can see, that the boundary of the
open disc is not in the domain of the homeomorphism, we can't say it is mapped to a loop in the codomain.

Although you can prove smaller open discs which boundaries are contained inside the domain are mapped to open sets of [tex]R^n[/tex], does that prove what we want?
 
  • #18
just take one point in the open disc. then there is a smaller closed disc with bolundary contaioned in the open disc and centered at the chosen point. then apply the argument to that.

this time you need a notion of "wrapping number" or enclosing number for an n-1 sphere about a point. but again it varies continuously as long as no one of the family of spheres hits the target point. so again we get that the smaller open disc maps onto the interior of the image of the image of the boundary.

to make this rigorous is a lot of work again.
 
  • #19
Okay, apparently what I posted before has a flaw since no one commented on it. Would anyone care to tell me what I did wrong?

ETA: Upon rereading this, it sounded kind of sarcastic. I didnt' mean for it to...I would really like to know my mistake.
 
  • #20
if you are referring to post 10, you made the same mistake as self adjoint made in post 8, and which i pointed out in the first paragraph of post 9.
 
  • #21
Actually this is a special case of the theorem on invariance of domain proved by L.E.J. Brouwer (Dutch topologist :smile:) in 1912:

For any open set [tex]U \subset R^n[/tex] and any continuous injective mapping [tex]f : U \rightarrow R^n[/tex]: the image [tex]f(U) \subset R^n[/tex] is open and [tex]f : U \rightarrow f(U)[/tex] is a homeomorphism.
 
  • #22
you are right of course. do you know brouwer's original method of proof?
 
  • #23
I think it uses his own Brouwer's fixed point theorem: every continuous map [tex]f : B^n \rightarrow B^n[/tex] has a fixed point. Or equivalently: there exist no retraction [tex]B^n \rightarrow S^{n-1}[/tex].

From this it can be shown that: if [tex]X,Y \subset R^n[/tex] closed and [tex]f : X \rightarrow Y[/tex] a homeomorphism, then [tex]f(\partial X)=\partial Y[/tex] (where [tex]\partial[/tex] denotes boundary).

Then we might apply this to a small closed ball [tex]B[/tex] around a point [tex]x[/tex] in the domain [tex]U[/tex] with [tex]x \in B - \partial B[/tex]. If we show that [tex]f:B \rightarrow f(B)[/tex] is a homeomorphism, we see that x maps to the interior of [tex]f(B) \subset f(U)[/tex], showing that f(U) is open.
 
  • #24
it sems to me brouwer's fix point- retraction theorem is a good bit easier than this, but maybe i am missing something. it does however covber the same ground i have been discussing in my intuitive proofs above. i.e. if one knew that the homeomorphic image of the sphere was the boundary of an open set, and that open set were homeomorphic to a ball (generalized jordan curve theorem) then it would follow from brouwer's theorem that the interior of that open set is in the image of the original open ball under the given map.

but in general i believe brouwers fix point theorem is rather easy in comparison to invariance of domain. (which of course only means i understand one better than the other.)
 

1. What is topology?

Topology is a branch of mathematics that studies the properties of geometric spaces that are preserved under continuous deformations. It focuses on the study of shapes and their properties, rather than specific measurements such as distance or angle.

2. What is a homeomorphism?

A homeomorphism is a type of continuous function between two topological spaces that is one-to-one, onto, and has a continuous inverse. It essentially means that two spaces are topologically equivalent or "the same" in terms of their shape and structure.

3. What is the importance of homeomorphism in R^n subspaces?

Homeomorphism in R^n subspaces is important because it allows us to understand the properties and relationships between geometric spaces. It helps us to classify and identify different spaces, and to determine if they are equivalent or different from each other.

4. How is homeomorphism different from isomorphism?

While homeomorphism focuses on the topological properties of spaces, isomorphism deals with algebraic structures. Isomorphism is a type of function that preserves algebraic operations, such as addition and multiplication. In other words, two spaces are isomorphic if they have the same algebraic structure, while two spaces are homeomorphic if they have the same topological structure.

5. How is homeomorphism used in real-world applications?

Homeomorphism has various applications in real-world fields such as physics, engineering, and computer science. It is used in shape recognition and pattern recognition algorithms, as well as in the study of fluid dynamics and optimization problems. It also has applications in image processing and computer graphics, where it is used to deform and manipulate shapes while preserving their topological properties.

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