joeboo
- 35
- 0
Let \rho be the uniform metric on \mathbb{R}^\omega
For reference, for two points:
x = (x_i) and y = (y_i) in \mathbb{R}^\omega
\rho(x,y) = \sup_i\{ \min\{|x_i - y_i|, 1\}\}
Now, define:
U(x,\epsilon) = \prod_i{(x_i - \epsilon, x_i + \epsilon)} \subset \mathbb{R}^\omega
I need to show 2 things:
1) For 0 < \epsilon < 1, the ball of radius \epsilon about x in the uniform metric, B_\rho(x,\epsilon) \neq U(x,\epsilon)
2)B_\rho(x,\epsilon) = \bigcup_{\delta < \epsilon}{U(x,\delta)}
-----
Now, first off, I can't understand how 1 can be true. It makes no sense to me. Am I misunderstanding the metric? To further obfuscate the issue, 2 seems to contradict 1. Afterall, doesn't:
\bigcup_{\delta < \epsilon}{\prod_i{(x_i-\delta, x_i+\delta)}}} = \prod_i{\bigcup_{\delta<\epsilon}{(x_i-\delta,x_i+\delta)}}}
The union inside the product of the latter being (x_i-\epsilon, x_i+\epsilon)? Thus, isn't part 2 suggesting that, in fact, B_\rho(x,\epsilon) = U(x,\epsilon)
Am I missing something big here? I feel like it's obvious the problem is incorrect, so I can't understand how the author ( Munkres' Topology First Edition, section 2-9 #6 for reference ) could make the mistake. Please, someone throw me a bone here, I'm just stumped
For reference, for two points:
x = (x_i) and y = (y_i) in \mathbb{R}^\omega
\rho(x,y) = \sup_i\{ \min\{|x_i - y_i|, 1\}\}
Now, define:
U(x,\epsilon) = \prod_i{(x_i - \epsilon, x_i + \epsilon)} \subset \mathbb{R}^\omega
I need to show 2 things:
1) For 0 < \epsilon < 1, the ball of radius \epsilon about x in the uniform metric, B_\rho(x,\epsilon) \neq U(x,\epsilon)
2)B_\rho(x,\epsilon) = \bigcup_{\delta < \epsilon}{U(x,\delta)}
-----
Now, first off, I can't understand how 1 can be true. It makes no sense to me. Am I misunderstanding the metric? To further obfuscate the issue, 2 seems to contradict 1. Afterall, doesn't:
\bigcup_{\delta < \epsilon}{\prod_i{(x_i-\delta, x_i+\delta)}}} = \prod_i{\bigcup_{\delta<\epsilon}{(x_i-\delta,x_i+\delta)}}}
The union inside the product of the latter being (x_i-\epsilon, x_i+\epsilon)? Thus, isn't part 2 suggesting that, in fact, B_\rho(x,\epsilon) = U(x,\epsilon)
Am I missing something big here? I feel like it's obvious the problem is incorrect, so I can't understand how the author ( Munkres' Topology First Edition, section 2-9 #6 for reference ) could make the mistake. Please, someone throw me a bone here, I'm just stumped