|
Article on other languages:
|
For the concept in set theory, see Baire space (set theory).
In mathematics, a Baire space is a topological space which, intuitively speaking, is very large and has "enough" points for certain limit processes. It is named in honor of René-Louis Baire who introduced the concept.
MotivationIn an arbitrary topological space, the class of closed sets with empty interior consists precisely of the boundaries of dense open sets. These sets are, in a certain sense, "negligible". Some examples are finite sets, smooth curves in the plane, and proper affine subspaces in a Euclidean space. A topological space is a Baire space if it is "large", meaning that it is not a countable union of negligible subsets. For example, the three dimensional Euclidean space is not a countable union of its affine planes. DefinitionThe precise definition of a Baire space has undergone slight changes throughout history, mostly due to prevailing needs and viewpoints. First, we give the usual modern definition, and then we give a historical definition which is closer to the definition originally given by Baire. Modern definitionA topological space is called a Baire space if the countable union of any collection of closed sets with empty interior has empty interior. This definition is equivalent to each of the following conditions:
Historical definitionIn his original definition, Baire defined a notion of category (unrelated to category theory) as follows. A subset of a topological space X is called
The definition for a Baire space can then be stated as follows: a topological space X is a Baire space if every non-empty open set is of second category in X. This definition is equivalent to the modern definition. A subset A of X is comeagre if its complement Examples
Baire category theoremThe Baire category theorem gives sufficient conditions for a topological space to be a Baire space. It is an important tool in topology and functional analysis.
BCT1 shows that each of the following is a Baire space:
BCT2 shows that every manifold is a Baire space, even if it is not paracompact, and hence not metrizable. For example, the long line is of second category. Properties
See alsoReferences
|
This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.