Cover (topology)
In mathematics, and more particularly in set theory, a cover (or covering)[1] of a set is a family of subsets of
whose union is all of
. More formally, if
is an indexed family of subsets
(indexed by the set
), then
is a cover of
if
Thus the collection
is a cover of
if each element of
belongs to at least one of the subsets
.
Definition
[edit]Covers are commonly used in the context of topology. If the set is a topological space, then a cover
of
is a collection of subsets
of
whose union is the whole space
. In this case
is said to cover
, or that the sets
cover
.[1]
If is a (topological) subspace of
, then a cover of
is a collection of subsets
of
whose union contains
. That is,
is a cover of
if
Here,
may be covered with either sets in
itself or sets in the parent space
.
A cover of is said to be locally finite if every point of
has a neighborhood that intersects only finitely many sets in the cover. Formally,
is locally finite if, for any
, there exists some neighborhood
of
such that the set
is finite. A cover of
is said to be point finite if every point of
is contained in only finitely many sets in the cover.[1] A cover is point finite if locally finite, though the converse is not necessarily true.
Subcover
[edit]Let be a cover of a topological space
. A subcover of
is a subset of
that still covers
. The cover
is said to be an open cover if each of its members is an open set. That is, each
is contained in
, where
is the topology on
.[1]
A simple way to get a subcover is to omit the sets contained in another set in the cover. Consider specifically open covers. Let be a topological basis of
and
be an open cover of
. First, take
. Then
is a refinement of
. Next, for each
one may select a
containing
(requiring the axiom of choice). Then
is a subcover of
Hence the cardinality of a subcover of an open cover can be as small as that of any topological basis. Hence, second countability implies space is Lindelöf.
Refinement
[edit]A refinement of a cover of a topological space
is a new cover
of
such that every set in
is contained in some set in
. Formally,
is a refinement of
if for all
there exists
such that
In other words, there is a refinement map satisfying
for every
This map is used, for instance, in the Čech cohomology of
.[2]
Every subcover is also a refinement, but the opposite is not always true. A subcover is made from the sets that are in the cover, but omitting some of them; whereas a refinement is made from any sets that are subsets of the sets in the cover.
The refinement relation on the set of covers of is transitive and reflexive, i.e. a Preorder. It is never asymmetric for
.
Generally speaking, a refinement of a given structure is another that in some sense contains it. Examples are to be found when partitioning an interval (one refinement of being
), considering topologies (the standard topology in Euclidean space being a refinement of the trivial topology). When subdividing simplicial complexes (the first barycentric subdivision of a simplicial complex is a refinement), the situation is slightly different: every simplex in the finer complex is a face of some simplex in the coarser one, and both have equal underlying polyhedra.
Yet another notion of refinement is that of star refinement.
Compactness
[edit]The language of covers is often used to define several topological properties related to compactness. A topological space is said to be:
- compact if every open cover has a finite subcover, (or equivalently that every open cover has a finite refinement);
- Lindelöf if every open cover has a countable subcover, (or equivalently that every open cover has a countable refinement);
- metacompact: if every open cover has a point-finite open refinement;
- paracompact: if every open cover admits a locally finite open refinement; and
- orthocompact: if every open cover has an interior-preserving open refinement.
For some more variations see the above articles.
Covering dimension
[edit]A topological space is said to be of covering dimension
if every open cover of
has a point-finite open refinement such that no point of
is included in more than
sets in the refinement and if
is the minimum value for which this is true.[3] If no such minimal
exists, the space is said to be of infinite covering dimension.
See also
[edit]- Atlas (topology) – Set of charts that describes a manifold
- Bornology – Mathematical generalization of boundedness
- Covering space – Type of continuous map in topology
- Grothendieck topology – Mathematical structure
- Partition of a set – Mathematical ways to group elements of a set
- Set cover problem – Classical problem in combinatorics
- Star refinement
- Subpaving – Geometrical object
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d Willard, Stephen (1998). General Topology. Dover Publications. p. 104. ISBN 0-486-43479-6.
- ^ Bott, Tu (1982). Differential Forms in Algebraic Topology. p. 111.
- ^ Munkres, James (1999). Topology (2nd ed.). Prentice Hall. ISBN 0-13-181629-2.
- Introduction to Topology, Second Edition, Theodore W. Gamelin & Robert Everist Greene. Dover Publications 1999. ISBN 0-486-40680-6
- Kelley, John L. (1975) [1955]. General Topology. Graduate Texts in Mathematics. Vol. 27 (2nd ed.). New York: Springer-Verlag. ISBN 978-0-387-90125-1. OCLC 1365153.
External links
[edit]- "Covering (of a set)", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press, 2001 [1994]