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0 answers
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Are there "chain complexes" and "homology groups" taking values in pairs of topological spaces?

Throughout this question, notation of the form $(X,A)$ denotes a sufficiently nice pair of topological spaces. I think for most of what I'm saying here, it is enough to assume that the inclusion $A \...
Vidit Nanda's user avatar
  • 15.5k
15 votes
1 answer
601 views

Topological spaces in which countable intersections of dense open sets have dense interior

In certain topological spaces, known as Baire spaces (e.g., completely metrizable spaces), a countable intersection of dense open sets is dense. Now consider the following strengthening of the Baire ...
Gro-Tsen's user avatar
  • 32.5k
15 votes
0 answers
455 views

Grothendieck dessins d'enfants - current surveys or text you can recommend?

I was recommended this forum to be the leading site for algebraic geometry, so I would like to ask you a question about Grothendieck dessins d´enfants. My background is in maps on surfaces (graph ...
15 votes
0 answers
716 views

Is this "Homology" useful to study?

In the usual singular homology of a topological space $X$, one consider the free abelian group generated by all continuous maps from the standard simplex $\Delta^{n}$ to $X$. Now we can ...
Ali Taghavi's user avatar
13 votes
0 answers
364 views

What is known about differentiable and analytic structures on the long line (and half-line)?

When reading about this question which recently became active for some reason, I wanted to make a comment, as a warning regarding non-metrizable manifolds, to the effect that the every $C^\infty$ ...
Gro-Tsen's user avatar
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12 votes
0 answers
313 views

For a Banach space $X$, when is $X$ homeomorphic to $X \setminus A$?

$\mathbb{R}^n\not\cong\mathbb{R}^n\setminus\{0\}$ are not homeomorphic is a triviality from Algebraic Topology. On the other hand, if $X$ is an infinite dimensional Banach space, then $X \cong X\...
T. Amdeberhan's user avatar
10 votes
0 answers
441 views

A new $\ell_p$-metric on the hyperspace of finite sets?

Let $(X,d)$ be a metric space and $Fin(X)$ be the family of all non-empty finite subsets of $X$. For every $n\in\mathbb N$ the elements of the power $X^n$ are thought as functions $f:n\to X$ where $n:=...
Taras Banakh's user avatar
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9 votes
0 answers
211 views

Is the category of all topological spaces, including the bad ones, simplicially tensored and cotensored?

Let $\textbf{Top}$ be the category of all topological spaces, including the bad ones. We can make $\textbf{Top}$ into a simplicially enriched category as follows: Given topological spaces $X$ and $Y$,...
Zhen Lin's user avatar
  • 15.9k
9 votes
0 answers
308 views

Refinement of hypercovers by ordinary covers

I am asking for references and discussions of statements of the form Every bounded hypercover can be refined by an ordinary cover By "bounded" I mean "finite height". E.g., are ...
Konrad Waldorf's user avatar
9 votes
0 answers
274 views

Does a generalization of Tietze's extension theorem hold for set-valued functions?

Let $X$ be a normal topological space. Tietze's extension theorem says that if $A \subset X$ is closed, then a continuous function $f: A \to \mathbb R^n$ can be extended to a continuous function whose ...
aduh's user avatar
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9 votes
0 answers
569 views

A standard name for a function satisfying the intermediate value theorem?

Do you know any (standard) name for a function $f:\mathbb R\to\mathbb R$ having the following weak intermediate value property: $(*)$ for any connected subset $C\subset \mathbb R$ and points $a,b\...
Taras Banakh's user avatar
  • 41.9k
9 votes
0 answers
685 views

Name for a topological space where every closed set contains a closed point

A coauthor and I have stumbled upon a useful topological property -- namely, we are interested in the property that every nonempty closed set contains a closed point. However, neither of us are ...
Neil Epstein's user avatar
  • 1,802
8 votes
0 answers
610 views

When is a constructible set locally closed?

Let $X$ be a topological space (or more specifically, $\mathbb{C}^N$ endowed with the Zariski topology), and let $S \subseteq X$ be a constructible set, i.e. $S=\cup_{i=1}^n C_i \cap U_i$, where the $...
Ben's user avatar
  • 980
8 votes
0 answers
110 views

Connected component optimization

For an open set $A\subset[0,1]^d$, denote the connected components of $A$ by $cc(A)$. Given a smooth symmetric function $f\colon[-1,1]^d\to\mathbb R$ with $f(0)>0$, I am interested in the ...
Julian's user avatar
  • 623
7 votes
0 answers
349 views

An open set which is not the union of a closed set and a countable set

The following fact is probably a known result: Fact. Let $X$ be an uncountable Polish space. Then there exists an open subset of $X$ which is not the union of a closed set and a countable set. Proof:...
Paolo Leonetti's user avatar
7 votes
0 answers
493 views

A locally compact, complete metric space in which the closure of open balls coincide with the closed ball is Heine-Borel

I saw the following result stated without a proof in a paper about the isometry group of metric measure spaces: Let $X$ be a locally compact, complete metric space such that for all $x \in X$ and $R &...
Kaitei's user avatar
  • 99
7 votes
0 answers
119 views

The automorphism group of the fibered cylinder

My collegue (Oleg Gutik) is interested in finding a proper reference to a description of the group $G$ of homeomorphisms $h:\mathbb T\times\mathbb R\to\mathbb T\times\mathbb R$ of the cylinder that ...
Taras Banakh's user avatar
  • 41.9k
7 votes
0 answers
305 views

Generalizing Gromov Hausdorff distance using Vietoris topology

There are two notions of convergence of a sequence of metric space. One is by the Gromov Hausdorff distance for compact metric spaces, another one is the pointed Gromov Hausdorff convergence for ...
JSCB's user avatar
  • 1,630
7 votes
0 answers
266 views

Remote points in $\beta X$

It is known that in general convergence by sequences is not enough to account for all points in $\beta X \setminus X$, where $\beta X$ refers to the Stone-Cech compactification of a topological space $...
noname's user avatar
  • 79
6 votes
0 answers
254 views

Every Polish space is the image of the Baire space by a continuous and closed map, reference

The following result was originally proven by Engelking in his 1969 paper On closed images of the space of irrationals (AMS, JSTOR, MR239571, Zbl 0177.25501) Every Polish space (i.e. every separable ...
Lorenzo's user avatar
  • 2,286
6 votes
0 answers
309 views

Have we discovered constructions for natural fractional dimensional spheres?

I have been thinking about a couple different problems in fractal geometry (including I one deleted because it was ill posed) and realize they all depend in a fundamental way on the problem of: Can we ...
Sidharth Ghoshal's user avatar
6 votes
0 answers
131 views

A theorem by R.L. Moore

The following result is due to R.L. Moore. Let $K\subseteq\mathbb C$ be compact. Suppose that $K$ is connected, and that $\mathbb C\setminus K$ is connected. Then $\partial K$ is connected. Does ...
ray's user avatar
  • 687
6 votes
0 answers
169 views

Whitney stratification for proper morphisms

Let $f: X \to \Delta$ be a flat, projective morphism, smooth over the punctured disc $\Delta^*:=\Delta \backslash \{0\}$ and central fiber $f^{-1}(0)$ is a reduced, simple normal crossings divisor. ...
Chen's user avatar
  • 1,593
6 votes
0 answers
132 views

Generalization of pseudogroups

Pseudogroups are defined here: https://ncatlab.org/nlab/show/pseudogroup One of the problems with defining manifolds in terms of pseudogroups is that it gives no notion of a morphism between manifolds,...
Joshua Meyers's user avatar
6 votes
0 answers
563 views

Grothendieck letter to Jun-Ichi Yamashita on tame topology

I am looking for Grothendieck writings on tame topology: a manuscript on tame topology mentioned by Scharlau; a letter to Jun-Ichi Yamashita; a letter to Z.Mebkhout. I am also interested in ...
user126830's user avatar
5 votes
0 answers
113 views

Stronger form of countable dense homogeneity

I am completing my undergrad thesis about topological properties of some subspaces of the real numbers, and CDH spaces are one of the topics I´ve covered (I know almost nothing about it, I only prove ...
Saúl RM's user avatar
  • 10.6k
5 votes
0 answers
481 views

Open convex hull of a closed set

Let $X$ be a closed set in a Euclidean space of finite dimension and suppose that its convex hull $H$ is open. I can prove that, in this case, $H$ is a Cartesian product of a line with an open convex ...
David Eppstein's user avatar
5 votes
0 answers
330 views

The second dual of $C(X)$ with the compact-open topology

Let $X$ be a compact Hausdorff space. Then $C(X)$ is a Banach algebra with the supremum norm and so is $A=C(X)^{**}$ under either Arens product. Moreover, it is easy to verify that $A\cong C(Z)$ for ...
user124775's user avatar
5 votes
0 answers
265 views

Quotienting disk inside sphere result in sphere

Let $S^k$ be a topological $k$-dimensional sphere. Let $D^k$ be a $k$ dimensional disk that includes in $S^k$. Let $q: D^k \to D^r$ be a map and $r \leq k$. Let $$W = S^k \sqcup D^r/\sim$$ where $S^...
Prasit's user avatar
  • 2,023
5 votes
0 answers
209 views

Compact set covered by two opens

The following lemma about locally compact (but not necessarily Hausdorff) spaces or continuous lattices appears frequently but without citation. It is easy to prove but important in proofs. If a ...
Paul Taylor's user avatar
  • 8,481
5 votes
1 answer
381 views

Sufficient criteria for $X \subset \mathcal{H}$ to be a Lipschitz (or unif. cont.) retract of $\mathcal{H}$

I am interested in sufficient criteria which ensure that a subset $X$ of a Hilbert space $\mathcal{H}$ is a Lipschitz (or at least uniformly continuous) retract of $\mathcal{H}$. Under which ...
PhoemueX's user avatar
  • 734
4 votes
0 answers
154 views

Is there a notion of "locally flat" for CW complexes?

A submanifold $X^n\subset Y^m$ is locally flat if each point $x\in X$ has a neighborhood $U\subset Y$ so that $(U,U\cap X)\simeq (\Bbb R^m, \Bbb R^n)$ with the standard embedding $\Bbb R^n\...
M. Winter's user avatar
  • 13.6k
4 votes
0 answers
107 views

Reference request for a theorem of Jaworowski

Jan Jaworowski, in 2000, proved the following theorem (I came to know about it from here) Jaworowski (2000) : Let $Y$ be a finite simplicial complex of dimension $k$ and let $n\ge 2k$. If $f:S^n\to Y$...
HackR's user avatar
  • 141
4 votes
0 answers
164 views

When $X$ is homeomorphic to $\mathscr{F}[X]$?

While I was talking to some colleagues, one of them said that there exists a topological space $X$ such that $X$ is uncountable, non-discrete and homeomorphic to $\mathscr{F}[X]$ (the Pixley-Roy ...
Carlos Jiménez's user avatar
4 votes
0 answers
182 views

Symmetric line spaces are homeomorphic to Euclidean spaces

For points $x,y,z$ of a metric space $(X,d)$ we write $\mathbf Mxyz$ and say that $y$ is a midpoint between $x$ and $z$ if $d(x,z)=d(x,y)+d(y,z)$ and $d(x,y)=d(y,z)$. Definition: A metric space $(X,d)$...
Taras Banakh's user avatar
  • 41.9k
4 votes
0 answers
183 views

In how far does the Whitney trick work in the piecewise linear setting in $\Bbb R^4$?

I usually read about the Whitney trick in the context of smooth manifolds, but I wonder in how far it works in the piecewise linear (PL) category as well. I have a specific setting in mind that I will ...
M. Winter's user avatar
  • 13.6k
4 votes
0 answers
142 views

Consistency of a strange (choice-wise) set of reals, pt. 2

This is a follow-up on this question. Consider a set $X\subseteq \mathbb{R}$ such that $X$ is not separable wrt its subspace topology Every countable family of non-empty pairwise disjoint subsets of $...
Lorenzo's user avatar
  • 2,286
4 votes
0 answers
140 views

Separable metrizable spaces far from being completely metrizable

I came across a kind of separable metrizable space that is "far" from being completely metrizable. Before specifying what I mean with "far", I recall that a space is said to be ...
Lorenzo's user avatar
  • 2,286
4 votes
0 answers
181 views

are trivial fibrations of finite CW-complexes soft for normal maps?

Are trivial Hurewicz fibrations of finite CW-complexes soft for normal maps, i.e. is it true that for any trivial Hurewicz fibration $f:Y_1\to Y_2$ and a closed subset $A$ of a hereditary normal space ...
user420620's user avatar
4 votes
0 answers
194 views

Are there any major differences in metric topologies and "non-symmetric" metric topologies

Let $X$ be a set and let $d:X\times X\rightarrow [0,\infty)$ satisfy all the axioms of a metric besides symmetry (i.e.: $d$ is a quasi-metric). Define a topology $\tau_{d:+}$ on $X$ induced by $d$ as ...
John_Algorithm's user avatar
4 votes
0 answers
273 views

Sierpinski's characterization of $F_{\sigma\delta}$ spaces

According to [2]: Let $X$ be a space. We call a system $(X_s)_{s\in T}$ a Sierpinski stratification of $X$ if $T$ is a nonempty tree over a countable alphabet and $X_s$ is a closed subset of $X$ for ...
D.S. Lipham's user avatar
  • 3,317
4 votes
0 answers
105 views

Borel selections of usco maps on metrizable compacta

The problem posed below is motivated by this problem of Chris Heunen and in fact is its reformulation in the language of usco maps. Let us recal that an usco map is an upper semicontinuous compact-...
Taras Banakh's user avatar
  • 41.9k
4 votes
0 answers
764 views

Counting loops in degree: 1 or 2?

Here's what seems to be an annoying technicality when dealing with loops in graphs. In the literature on expander graphs (and surely not only), it seems to be the convention that a loop at vertex $v$ ...
amakelov's user avatar
  • 997
4 votes
0 answers
414 views

Topology on the space of Borel measures

Let $ B $ be the set of all measures $ \phi $ of $ \mathbf{R}^{n} $ such that every open set is $ \phi $-measurable (sometimes these measures are called Borel measures). Note the measures in $ B $ are ...
Longyearbyen's user avatar
4 votes
0 answers
2k views

Approximation of continuous functions by Lipschitz functions in the topology of uniform convergence on compact sets

I was involved into this subject when I answered this question from MSE. Trying to generalize my answer, I am thinking about a following Question. Let $X$ and $Y$ be metric spaces. When each ...
Alex Ravsky's user avatar
  • 5,409
4 votes
1 answer
479 views

"monotone" homotopy?

This is a question about a concept that I call "monotone homotopy" which arises in a natural way in some topological situations. Let $X$ be a (bounded) metric space, $Y$ be a topological space and $A\...
reader2's user avatar
  • 101
3 votes
0 answers
124 views

Injective envelope of B(H)

$B(\ell^2)$ is an injective operator system by a result of Arveson. However, $B(\ell^2)$ is not an injective Banach space, since it is not linearly isomorphic to a $C(K)$ space (for instance, $C(K)$ ...
Onur Oktay's user avatar
  • 2,605
3 votes
0 answers
101 views

Constructively valid reference for the soberness of discrete spaces and points of a locale coproduct

I am looking for constructively valid references for the following two related facts: discrete topological spaces are sober, the points of a locale coproduct are the disjoint union of the points of ...
Gro-Tsen's user avatar
  • 32.5k
3 votes
0 answers
109 views

"Practical" references on mapping spaces as infinite-dimensional manifolds

I am studying spaces of the form $C^{k}(\mathcal{M},\mathcal{N})$ between manifolds ($k=\infty$ allowed) and I am looking for extensive references, especially analysing their topology and smooth ...
B.Hueber's user avatar
  • 1,171
3 votes
0 answers
88 views

Is the thickening of a PL 2-disc in $\Bbb R^4$ a 4-ball?

Let $D\subset\Bbb R^4$ be a PL-embedded 2-dimensional disc. Let $N=D+K$ be a thickening of the disc, where $K$ is some sufficiently small 4-dimensional PL-ball and "$+$" means Minkowski ...
M. Winter's user avatar
  • 13.6k