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4 votes
1 answer
223 views

Is every compact, sober, second-countable space the image of $2^\omega$?

As a bonus, is every compact, $T_0$, second-countable space the image of $2^\omega \times \omega$? As a further bonus, can we strengthen "image" to "quotient"? My motivation for ...
Robin Saunders's user avatar
6 votes
0 answers
169 views

Topological spaces for which $w(X)\leq |X|$ holds

Let $w(X) = \inf\{|\mathcal{B}| : \mathcal{B} \text{ is a base for }X\}$ be the weight of topological space $X$. For metric spaces and locally compact spaces we have inequality $w(X)\leq |X|$. This ...
Jakobian's user avatar
  • 1,201
4 votes
1 answer
252 views

Does every (Abelian) Polish group have a nontrivial locally compact subgroup?

The question is pretty much in the title, suppose that $G$ is an (Abelian) nontrivial Polish group, must $G$ have a nontrivial locally compact (in the induced topology, hence necessarily closed) ...
Alessandro Codenotti's user avatar
6 votes
1 answer
173 views

References on semigroup actions

I posted this question on Math Stack Exchange about 10 days ago, but received no answer (https://math.stackexchange.com/q/4843881/1223994). I would like to ask for references on semigroup actions on ...
Marco Farotti's user avatar
24 votes
1 answer
1k views

What topological principle is at work here?

[I'm cross-posting this from MSE. I initially asked there 10 days ago, and the question was well-received, but left unanswered.] My question is inspired by a problem I discovered in Putnam and Beyond,...
Yly's user avatar
  • 956
4 votes
0 answers
249 views

Homotopy group of maps into S^3 using its Lie group multiplication to define the group operation

The Bruschlinsky group of maps of a space X into S1 up to homotopy, using the multiplication on S1, is well-known to equal the first cohomology group of X (at least assuming X is a reasonably nice ...
Daniel Asimov's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
117 views

Example of a metrizable space that is not an ANR

I have been looking for an example of a metrizable space that is not an absolute neighborhood retract (ANR). Recall that a metrizable space $X$ is called an ANR if there exists an open set $U$ in a ...
Katrina's user avatar
  • 506
6 votes
1 answer
231 views

Weakly contractible $X$, but none of the maps $*\to X$ are cofibrations

Let $\mathrm{Top}$ be the category of all topological spaces and continuous maps. The Quillen model structure on $\mathrm{Top}$ has weak equvalences $W = \{ \text{weak homotopy equivalences} \}$, ...
mathmo's user avatar
  • 331
3 votes
1 answer
132 views

Is it possible to determine whether the critical values are nowhere dense in the case of a bounded set of stationary points?

Let $g:\Bbb R^{d}\rightarrow \Bbb R$ be a non-negative, continuously differentiable function satisfying the following two conditions: The set $\{\theta\in\Bbb R^n\mid\|\nabla g(\theta)\|<\eta\}$ ...
金睿楠's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
85 views

Increasing coverings of rigid analytic varieties

Let $K/\mathbb{Q}_p$ be complete and let $X/K$ be a rigid analytic variety. When does $X$ admit an "increasing" admissible covering by quasi-compact admissible (in the strong G-topology) ...
Arun Soor's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
153 views

For topological torus action, there is a subcircle whose fixed point is the same as the torus

Let $T=\mathbb{S}^{1}\times \mathbb{S}^{1}\times \cdots \times \mathbb{S}^{1} $ ($n$ times) be an $n$-dimensional torus acting on any topological space $X$. The group $G$ is said to act on a space $X$ ...
Mehmet Onat's user avatar
  • 1,367
5 votes
1 answer
191 views

Monoidal topology and coarse spaces

Is there a description of (quasi-)coarse spaces that is analogous to the description of (quasi-)uniform spaces as lax algebras?
Cameron Zwarich's user avatar
4 votes
0 answers
156 views

Known relations between mutual information and covering number?

This is a question about statistical learning theory. Consider a hypothesis class $\mathcal{F}$, parameterized by real vectors $w \in \mathbb{R}^p$. Suppose I have a data distribution $D \sim \mu$ and ...
Tanishq Kumar's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
75 views

Are the automorphisms of the power semigroup of a cancellative semigroup cardinality-preserving?

Let $S$ be a semigroup (written multiplicatively) and $f$ be an automorphism of the power semigroup $\mathcal P(S)$ of $S$, that is, a bijective function on the family of all non-empty subsets of $S$ ...
Salvo Tringali's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
164 views

Triviality of map $(\Sigma \theta)^*$

We know that there is a cofibration sequence $$S^{4n+1}\xrightarrow{\theta}\Sigma^{4m-1} Q_{n-m} \rightarrow \Sigma^{4m-1} Q_{n-m+1} \rightarrow S^{4n+2}\xrightarrow{\Sigma\theta}\Sigma^{4m} Q_{n-m}.$$...
Sajjad Mohammadi's user avatar
7 votes
1 answer
185 views

Existence of Borel uniformization for coanalytic set with non-$K_\sigma$ sections

Suppose that $X$ is a Polish (or standard Borel) space and $\omega^\omega$ is the Baire space of all natural number sequences. My question is: If $A\subseteq X\times \omega^\omega$ is a coanalytic set ...
Iian Smythe's user avatar
  • 3,115
0 votes
0 answers
98 views

Does weak $L^2$ approximation implies $L^2$ approximation under a condition similar to convexity?

(Cross posted from Math StackExchange: Does weak $L^2$ approximation implies $L^2$ approximation under a condition similar to convexity?) Assume $(\Omega, \mu)$ is a probability space. Consider a ...
David Gao's user avatar
  • 2,830
3 votes
1 answer
268 views

Is the Fortissimo space on discrete $\omega_1$ radial?

Let $\omega_1$ have the discrete topology. Its Fortissimo space is $X=\omega_1\cup\{\infty\}$ where neighborhoods of $\infty$ are co-countable. A space is radial provided for every subset $A$ and ...
Steven Clontz's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
80 views

Construct manifold given simplical complex

It's known that, in general, given a simplical complex, answering if it's homeomorphic to a manifold is undecidable. However, given a positive answer to the problem, is there an algorithm to construct ...
Gabriel Golfetti's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
108 views

Mandelbrot boundary and component of $\infty$

Let $M$ be the Mandelbrot set, and $\partial M$ its boundary. So $\partial M$ is the set of those points $z\in M$ such that every neighborhood of $z$ contains a point of $\mathbb R^2\setminus M$. Let $...
D.S. Lipham's user avatar
  • 3,317
1 vote
0 answers
83 views

Approximating evalutation maps at open sets over invariant measures

Let $G$ be a group acting by homeomorphisms on a compact metrizable space, say $X$; let's denote by $\alpha:G\to\mathrm{Homeo}(X)$ the action, $g\mapsto\alpha_g$, and consider the weak-$^*$ compact ...
J G's user avatar
  • 93
1 vote
0 answers
62 views

Continuous maps between compact space and cubes

Let $X$ be a compact metrizable space. Let $f$ be a continuous map from $X$ to the cube $[0,1]^m$. I would like to know under which condition of a continuous map $g: X\to [0,1]^n$ there exists a ...
user119197's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
178 views

Compact-open Topology for Partial Maps?

I asked the same question on MathStackExchange a month ago and received no answer. I feel that this would be more suitable for MathOverflow. Compact open topology is one of the most common ways of ...
Bumblebee's user avatar
  • 1,093
3 votes
0 answers
239 views

Metrizing pointwise convergence of *sequences* of functionals in a dual space

This question was asked by myself on the math stackexchange a few days ago. I thought I'd repeat it here: Let $X$ be a normed, real vector space of uncountable dimension. Let $X^*$ denote the set of ...
Mustafa Motiwala's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
203 views

Simple closed curves in a simply connected domain

Let $U$ be a bounded simply connected domain in the plane. Let $K$ be the boundary (or frontier) of $U$. For every $\varepsilon>0$ is there a simple closed curve $S\subset U$ such that the ...
D.S. Lipham's user avatar
  • 3,317
2 votes
0 answers
136 views

Progess on conjectures of Palis

I came across a "A Global Perspective for Non-Conservative Dynamics" by Palis. He has some conjectures "Global Conjecture: There is a dense set $D$ of dynamics such that any element of ...
NicAG's user avatar
  • 247
1 vote
1 answer
142 views

Congruences that aren't "finite from above," take 2: semigroups

This is a hopefully less trivial version of this question. Briefly, say that a congruence is parafinite if it is the largest congruence contained in some equivalence relation with finitely many ...
Noah Schweber's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
92 views

Continuous selectors of a continuous multifunctin on a compact metric space

I am currently working on a continuous selector problem of multifunctions. I am trying to figure out if a continuous multifunction defined on a compact metric space always admit a continuous selector. ...
Saito's user avatar
  • 79
10 votes
1 answer
572 views

Are “most” bounded derivatives not Riemann integrable?

Given $a,b\in\mathbb R$ with $a<b$. Let $$X=\{f\in C([a,b]): f \text{ is differentiable on } [a,b] \text{ with }f' \text{ bounded }\},$$ and $$A=\{f\in X: f' \text{ is Riemann integrable}\}. $$ It ...
Fergns Qian's user avatar
2 votes
2 answers
356 views

Is a Hausdorff separable topological space that is uniform and complete necessarily a Polish space?

Is an Hausdorff separable topological space that is uniform and complete necessarily a Polish space ?
Gérard Lang's user avatar
  • 2,655
4 votes
1 answer
297 views

Why is this continuum circle-like?

A continuum is a compact connected metrizable space. A continuum $X$ is called arc-like if for every $\varepsilon>0$ there is an open cover $U_1,\ldots,U_n$ of $X$ such that the diameter of $U_i$ ...
Alessandro Codenotti's user avatar
6 votes
5 answers
953 views

Two arcs in the complement of a disc must intersect?

Let $D=\{z\in \mathbb C:|z|\leq 1\}$ be the unit disc in the complex plane, with interior $U=\{z\in \mathbb C:|z|<1\}$. Let $A\subset \mathbb C\setminus U$ be an arc intersecting $D$ only at its ...
D.S. Lipham's user avatar
  • 3,317
10 votes
6 answers
879 views

Countable chain condition in topology

A topological space $X$ is said to have the countable chain condition (ccc) if every collection of open and disjoint subsets of $X$ is at most countable. This definition can be found in L. Steen, J. ...
Julian Hölz's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
335 views

Hahn-Banach theorem and ultrafilter lemma

I'm unable to understand a remark in "Two application of the method of construction by ultrapowers to analysis" by Luxemburg, which uses the ultrafilter lemma to prove the Hahn-Banach ...
oggius's user avatar
  • 95
3 votes
0 answers
103 views

An isomorphism problem for semigroups of ideals

An ideal of a semigroup $S$ (written multiplicatively) is a set $I \subseteq S$ such that $IS$ and $SI$ are both contained in $I$ (here, $XY$ means, for all $X, Y \subseteq S$, the setwise product of $...
Salvo Tringali's user avatar
4 votes
2 answers
292 views

$\mathrm{String}/\mathbb{CP}^{\infty}=\mathrm{Spin}$ or a correction to this quotient group relation

We know that there is a fiber sequence: $$ \dotsb \to B^3 \mathbb Z \to B \mathrm{String} \to B \mathrm{Spin} \to B^4 \mathbb Z \to \dotsb. $$ Is this fiber sequence induced from a short exact ...
zeta's user avatar
  • 447
1 vote
0 answers
145 views

Determine the Eilenberg-MacLane spaces on the right-handed side of this Whitehead tower?

What and how to determine the Eilenberg-MacLane spaces on the right-handed side of this Whitehead tower? Namely, how do we know $$ K(Z_2,1)?, \quad K(Z_2,2)?, \quad K(Z,4)? $$ Naively -- in each step ...
zeta's user avatar
  • 447
14 votes
4 answers
742 views

Prove or disprove: $R^{n+1} \supseteq R \cap R^2 \cap \cdots \cap R^n$ for every binary relation $R$ on a set of size $n$

Prove or disprove: $R^{n+1} \supseteq R \cap R^2 \cap \cdots \cap R^n$ for every binary relation $R$ on a set of size $n$. I have verified the statement for $n \leq 4$ with a Mathematica code. I have ...
Geoffrey Critzer's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
240 views

Examples of when $X$ is homotopy equivalent to $X\times X$

I was thinking about this question the other day: When is a topological space $X$ homotopy equivalent to $X\times X$ (with the product topology)? This is essentially a cross-post of this MSE question.....
pyridoxal_trigeminus's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
165 views

Are all infinite-dimensional Lie groups noncompact?

Basically what the title says — if a Lie group is infinite-dimensional, is it necessarily noncompact?
Panopticon's user avatar
11 votes
1 answer
428 views

Is the Mandelbrot set Suslinian?

The Mandelbrot set is known to be (path-)connected and compact. A non-degenerate space with these properties is called a continuum. A continuum $X$ is Suslinian if every collection of non-degenerate ...
D.S. Lipham's user avatar
  • 3,317
2 votes
0 answers
92 views

Explicit CW-complex replacement of the space of reparametrization maps

Let $P$ be the space of nondecreasing surjective maps from $[0,1]$ to itself equipped with the compact-open topology: $P$ is contractible. There exists a trivial fibration $P^{cof} \to P$ from a CW-...
Philippe Gaucher's user avatar
10 votes
1 answer
392 views

Two dimensional perfect sets

Consider the following family of sets $$ \begin{align*} \mathcal{F} = \{X\subseteq [0,1]\times [0,1] \mid \ &X \text{ is closed and }\\& \forall x \in \pi_0 (X) (\{y \in [0,1] \mid (x,y) \in ...
Lorenzo's user avatar
  • 2,286
0 votes
2 answers
348 views

If a graph embedded on a surface is divided by a curve into a right and left that do not intersect can it be embedded on a surface of smaller genus?

Suppose we have a graph $G$ embedded on a (smooth, orientable etc) surface $Q$. Suppose there is a cycle $C$ of $G$ such that $C$ does not separate our surface $Q$ into two connected regions and ...
Hao S's user avatar
  • 111
1 vote
1 answer
192 views

Can orientation preserving diffeomorphism in $\mathbb{R}^d$ be presented by flowmap of dynamical systems?

Because flowmaps are homeomorphic maps, I was wondering if there is any literature that proves that diffeomorphism $\Phi(x)$ can be expressed as a flowmap of a certain dynamical system? that is, does ...
li ang Duan's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
141 views

Can a closed null-homotopic curve be filled in by a disc?

Let $U\subseteq\Bbb R^n$ be an open set and $\gamma\subset U$ a closed null-homotopic curve in $U$ (i.e. it can be contracted to a point). Then is there an embedded disc $D\subset U$ with boundary $\...
M. Winter's user avatar
  • 13.6k
2 votes
0 answers
103 views

Unordered configuration space with non-distinct points

Consider a topological space $X$, a natural number $n>0$ and the quotient topological space $Q_n(X)$ of $X^n$ by the equivalence relation : $x\sim y$ if and only if there is a permutation $\sigma$ ...
Phil-W's user avatar
  • 1,035
8 votes
1 answer
264 views

Does the continuous image of a disc contain an embedded disc?

Let $\phi:\Bbb D^2\to\Bbb R^n$ be a continuous mapping of the 2-disc $\Bbb D^2$ that is injective on the boundary $\partial\Bbb D^2=\Bbb S^1$. Does its image contain an embedded disc with the same ...
M. Winter's user avatar
  • 13.6k
3 votes
1 answer
161 views

Approximating continuous functions from $K\times L$ into $[0,1]$

Let $K$ and $L$ be compact Hausdorff spaces, let $f:K\times L\to [0,1]$ be continuous and let $\varepsilon>0$. Can we find continuous $g_{1},...,g_{n}:K\to[0,+\infty)$ and $h_{1},...,h_{n}:L\to[0,+\...
erz's user avatar
  • 5,529
0 votes
0 answers
92 views

What is the highest $n\in\Bbb N$ for which a complete classification of inverse semigroups of order up to $n$ is known?

What is the highest $n\in\Bbb N$ for which a complete classification of inverse semigroups of order up to $n$ is known? Given that there are $3{,}684{,}030{,}417$ semigroups of order $8$, I guess $n\...
Shaun's user avatar
  • 379

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