Fiber (mathematics)
In mathematics, the fiber (US English) or fibre (British English) of an element under a function
is the preimage of the singleton set
,[1]: p.69 that is
Properties and applications
[edit]In elementary set theory
[edit]If and
are the domain and image of
, respectively, then the fibers of
are the sets in
which is a partition of the domain set . Note that
must map
onto
in order for the set defined above to be a partition, otherwise it would contain the empty set as one of its elements. The fiber containing an element
is the set
For example, let be the function from
to
that sends point
to
. The fiber of 5 under
are all the points on the straight line with equation
. The fibers of
are that line and all the straight lines parallel to it, which form a partition of the plane
.
More generally, if is a linear map from some linear vector space
to some other linear space
, the fibers of
are affine subspaces of
, which are all the translated copies of the null space of
.
If is a real-valued function of several real variables, the fibers of the function are the level sets of
. If
is also a continuous function and
is in the image of
the level set
will typically be a curve in 2D, a surface in 3D, and, more generally, a hypersurface in the domain of
The fibers of are the equivalence classes of the equivalence relation
defined on the domain
such that
if and only if
.
In topology
[edit]In point set topology, one generally considers functions from topological spaces to topological spaces.
If is a continuous function and if
(or more generally, the image set
) is a T1 space then every fiber is a closed subset of
In particular, if
is a local homeomorphism from
to
, each fiber of
is a discrete subspace of
.
A function between topological spaces is called monotone if every fiber is a connected subspace of its domain. A function is monotone in this topological sense if and only if it is non-increasing or non-decreasing, which is the usual meaning of "monotone function" in real analysis.
A function between topological spaces is (sometimes) called a proper map if every fiber is a compact subspace of its domain. However, many authors use other non-equivalent competing definitions of "proper map" so it is advisable to always check how a particular author defines this term. A continuous closed surjective function whose fibers are all compact is called a perfect map.
A fiber bundle is a function between topological spaces
and
whose fibers have certain special properties related to the topology of those spaces.
In algebraic geometry
[edit]In algebraic geometry, if is a morphism of schemes, the fiber of a point
in
is the fiber product of schemes
where
is the residue field at
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Lee, John M. (2011). Introduction to Topological Manifolds (2nd ed.). Springer Verlag. ISBN 978-1-4419-7940-7.