Choquet's Game
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The Choquet game is a topological game named after
Gustave Choquet Gustave Choquet (; 1 March 1915 – 14 November 2006) was a French mathematician. Choquet was born in Solesmes, Nord. His contributions include work in functional analysis, potential theory, topology and measure theory. He is known for creati ...
, who was in 1969 the first to investigate such games. A closely related game is known as the strong Choquet game. Let X be a non-empty topological space. The Choquet game of X, G(X), is defined as follows: Player I chooses U_0, a non-empty
open subset In mathematics, open sets are a generalization of open intervals in the real line. In a metric space (a set along with a distance defined between any two points), open sets are the sets that, with every point , contain all points that are suff ...
of X, then Player II chooses V_0, a non-empty open subset of U_0, then Player I chooses U_1, a non-empty open subset of V_0, etc. The players continue this process, constructing a sequence U_0 \supseteq V_0 \supseteq U_1 \supseteq V_1 \supseteq U_2 ... If \bigcap\limits_^ U_i = \emptyset then Player I wins, otherwise Player II wins. It was proved by
John C. Oxtoby John C. Oxtoby (1910–1991) was an American mathematician. In 1936, he graduated with a Master of Science in Mathematics from Harvard University. He was professor of mathematics at Bryn Mawr College in Pennsylvania Pennsylvania (; ( Pennsy ...
that a non-empty topological space X is a Baire space if and only if Player I has no winning strategy. A nonempty topological space X in which Player II has a winning strategy is called a Choquet space. (Note that it is possible that neither player has a winning strategy.) Thus every Choquet space is Baire. On the other hand, there are Baire spaces (even separable metrizable ones) which are not Choquet spaces, so the converse fails. The strong Choquet game of X, G^s(X), is defined similarly, except that Player I chooses (x_0,U_0), then Player II chooses V_0, then Player I chooses (x_1,U_1), etc, such that x_i \in U_i, V_i for all i. A topological space X in which Player II has a winning strategy for G^s(X) is called a strong Choquet space. Every strong Choquet space is a Choquet space, although the converse does not hold. All nonempty complete metric spaces and compact T2 spaces are strong Choquet. (In the first case, Player II, given (x_i,U_i), chooses V_i such that \operatorname(V_i)<1/i and \operatorname(V_i) \subseteq V_. Then the sequence \left \ \to x \in V_i for all i.) Any subset of a strong Choquet space which is a G_\delta set is strong Choquet. Metrizable spaces are completely metrizable if and only if they are strong Choquet.{{cite book, last1=Kechris, first1=Alexander, title=Classical Descriptive Set Theory, date=2012, publisher=Springer Science & Business Media, isbn=9781461241904, pages=43-45, url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WR3SBwAAQBAJ&pg=PA43, language=en


References

Descriptive set theory Topological games