Closed set

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Revision as of 05:12, 2 September 2007 by imported>Hendra I. Nurdin (Typo: removed second 'respectively')
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In mathematics, a set , where is some topological space, is said to be closed if , the complement of in , is an open set

Examples

1. Let with the usual topology induced by the Euclidean distance. Open sets are then of the form where and is an arbitrary index set. Then closed sets by definition are of the form .

2. As a more interesting example, consider the function space consisting of all real valued continuous functions on the interval [a,b] (a<b) endowed with a topology induced by the distance . In this topology, the sets

and

are open sets while the sets

and

are closed (the sets and Failed to parse (SVG (MathML can be enabled via browser plugin): Invalid response ("Math extension cannot connect to Restbase.") from server "https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/":): {\displaystyle D} are, respectively, the closure of the sets Failed to parse (SVG (MathML can be enabled via browser plugin): Invalid response ("Math extension cannot connect to Restbase.") from server "https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/":): {\displaystyle A} and Failed to parse (SVG (MathML can be enabled via browser plugin): Invalid response ("Math extension cannot connect to Restbase.") from server "https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/":): {\displaystyle B} ).


See also

Topology

Analysis