Derived set (mathematics)

In mathematics, more specifically in point-set topology, the derived set of a subset of a topological space is the set of all limit points of It is usually denoted by

The concept was first introduced by Georg Cantor in 1872 and he developed set theory in large part to study derived sets on the real line.

Definition

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The derived set of a subset   of a topological space   denoted by   is the set of all points   that are limit points of   that is, points   such that every neighbourhood of   contains a point of   other than   itself.

Examples

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If   is endowed with its usual Euclidean topology then the derived set of the half-open interval   is the closed interval  

Consider   with the topology (open sets) consisting of the empty set and any subset of   that contains 1. The derived set of   is  [1]

Properties

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Let   denote a topological space in what follows.

If   and   are subsets of   the derived set has the following properties:[2]

  •  
  •   implies  
  •  
  •   implies  

A set   is closed precisely when  [1] that is, when   contains all its limit points. For any   the set   is closed and is the closure of   (that is, the set  ).[3]

Closedness of derived sets

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The derived set of a set need not be closed in general. For example, if   with the indiscrete topology, the set   has derived set   which is not closed in   But the derived set of a closed set is always closed.[proof 1]

For a point   the derived set of the singleton   is the set   consisting of the points in the closure of   and different from   A space   is called a TD space[4] if the derived set of every singleton in   is closed; that is, if   is closed for every   in other words, if every point   is isolated in   A space   has the property that   is closed for all sets   if and only if it is a TD space.[5]

Every TD space is a T0 space.[6]

Every T1 space is a TD space,[6] since every singleton is closed, hence   which is closed. Consequently, in a T1 space, the derived set of any set is closed.[7][8]

The relation between these properties can be summarized as

 

The implications are not reversible. For example, the Sierpiński space is TD and not T1. And the right order topology on   is T0 and not TD.

More properties

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Two subsets   and   are separated precisely when they are disjoint and each is disjoint from the other's derived set  [9]

A bijection between two topological spaces is a homeomorphism if and only if the derived set of the image (in the second space) of any subset of the first space is the image of the derived set of that subset.[10]

In a T1 space, the derived set of any finite set is empty and furthermore,   for any subset   and any point   of the space. In other words, the derived set is not changed by adding to or removing from the given set a finite number of points.[11]

A set   with   (that is,   contains no isolated points) is called dense-in-itself. A set   with   is called a perfect set.[12] Equivalently, a perfect set is a closed dense-in-itself set, or, put another way, a closed set with no isolated points. Perfect sets are particularly important in applications of the Baire category theorem.

The Cantor–Bendixson theorem states that any Polish space can be written as the union of a countable set and a perfect set. Because any Gδ subset of a Polish space is again a Polish space, the theorem also shows that any Gδ subset of a Polish space is the union of a countable set and a set that is perfect with respect to the induced topology.

Topology in terms of derived sets

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Because homeomorphisms can be described entirely in terms of derived sets, derived sets have been used as the primitive notion in topology. A set of points   can be equipped with an operator   mapping subsets of   to subsets of   such that for any set   and any point  :

  1.  
  2.  
  3.   implies  
  4.  
  5.   implies  

Calling a set   closed if   will define a topology on the space in which   is the derived set operator, that is,  

Cantor–Bendixson rank

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For ordinal numbers   the  -th Cantor–Bendixson derivative of a topological space X is defined by repeatedly applying the derived set operation using transfinite recursion as follows:

  •  
  •  
  •   for limit ordinals  

The transfinite sequence of Cantor–Bendixson derivatives of   is decreasing and must eventually be constant. The smallest ordinal   such that   is called the Cantor–Bendixson rank of  

This investigation into the derivation process was one of the motivations for introducing ordinal numbers by Georg Cantor.

See also

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  • Adherent point – Point that belongs to the closure of some given subset of a topological space
  • Condensation point
  • Isolated point – Point of a subset S around which there are no other points of S
  • Limit point – Cluster point in a topological space

Notes

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  1. ^ a b Baker 1991, p. 41
  2. ^ Pervin 1964, p.38
  3. ^ Baker 1991, p. 42
  4. ^ Aull, C. E.; Thron, W. J. (1962). "Separation axioms between T0 and T1" (PDF). Nederl. Akad. Wetensch. Proc. Ser. A. 65: 26–37. doi:10.1016/S1385-7258(62)50003-6. Zbl 0108.35402.Definition 3.1
  5. ^ Aull & Thron 1962, Theorem 5.1.
  6. ^ a b Goubault-Larrecq, Jean. "TD spaces". Non-Hausdorff Topology and Domain Theory.
  7. ^ Engelking 1989, p. 47
  8. ^ "Proving the derived set E' is closed".
  9. ^ Pervin 1964, p. 51
  10. ^ Hocking, John G.; Young, Gail S. (1988) [1961], Topology, Dover, p. 4, ISBN 0-486-65676-4
  11. ^ Kuratowski 1966, p.77
  12. ^ Pervin 1964, p. 62

Proofs

  1. ^ Proof: Assuming   is a closed subset of   which shows that   take the derived set on both sides to get   that is,   is closed in  

References

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Further reading

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