Scattered Space
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In mathematics, a scattered space is a
topological space In mathematics, a topological space is, roughly speaking, a geometrical space in which closeness is defined but cannot necessarily be measured by a numeric distance. More specifically, a topological space is a set whose elements are called po ...
''X'' that contains no nonempty
dense-in-itself In general topology, a subset A of a topological space is said to be dense-in-itself or crowded if A has no isolated point. Equivalently, A is dense-in-itself if every point of A is a limit point of A. Thus A is dense-in-itself if and only if A\su ...
subset. Equivalently, every nonempty subset ''A'' of ''X'' contains a point isolated in ''A''. A subset of a topological space is called a scattered set if it is a scattered space with the
subspace topology In topology and related areas of mathematics, a subspace of a topological space ''X'' is a subset ''S'' of ''X'' which is equipped with a topology induced from that of ''X'' called the subspace topology (or the relative topology, or the induced to ...
.


Examples

* Every discrete space is scattered. * Every ordinal number with the
order topology In mathematics, an order topology is a certain topology that can be defined on any totally ordered set. It is a natural generalization of the topology of the real numbers to arbitrary totally ordered sets. If ''X'' is a totally ordered set, th ...
is scattered. Indeed, every nonempty subset ''A'' contains a minimum element, and that element is isolated in ''A''. * A space ''X'' with the
particular point topology In mathematics, the particular point topology (or included point topology) is a topology where a set is open if it contains a particular point of the topological space. Formally, let ''X'' be any non-empty set and ''p'' ∈ ''X''. The collec ...
, in particular the Sierpinski space, is scattered. This is an example of a scattered space that is not a T1 space. * The closure of a scattered set is not necessarily scattered. For example, in the Euclidean plane \R^2 take a countably infinite discrete set ''A'' in the unit disk, with the points getting denser and denser as one approaches the boundary. For example, take the union of the vertices of a series of n-gons centered at the origin, with radius getting closer and closer to 1. Then the closure of ''A'' will contain the whole circle of radius 1, which is dense-in-itself.


Properties

* In a topological space ''X'' the closure of a dense-in-itself subset is a
perfect set In general topology, a subset of a topological space is perfect if it is closed and has no isolated points. Equivalently: the set S is perfect if S=S', where S' denotes the set of all Limit point, limit points of S, also known as the derived set ...
. So ''X'' is scattered if and only if it does not contain any nonempty perfect set. * Every subset of a scattered space is scattered. Being scattered is a
hereditary property In mathematics, a hereditary property is a property of an object that is inherited by all of its subobjects, where the meaning of ''subobject'' depends on the context. These properties are particularly considered in topology and graph theory, but al ...
. * Every scattered space ''X'' is a T0 space. (''Proof:'' Given two distinct points ''x'', ''y'' in ''X'', at least one of them, say ''x'', will be isolated in \. That means there is neighborhood of ''x'' in ''X'' that does not contain ''y''.) * In a T0 space the union of two scattered sets is scattered. Note that the T0 assumption is necessary here. For example, if X=\ with the
indiscrete topology In topology, a topological space with the trivial topology is one where the only open sets are the empty set and the entire space. Such spaces are commonly called indiscrete, anti-discrete, concrete or codiscrete. Intuitively, this has the conseque ...
, \ and \ are both scattered, but their union, X, is not scattered as it has no isolated point. * Every T1 scattered space is
totally disconnected In topology and related branches of mathematics, a totally disconnected space is a topological space that has only singletons as connected subsets. In every topological space, the singletons (and, when it is considered connected, the empty set) ...
. (''Proof:'' If ''C'' is a nonempty connected subset of ''X'', it contains a point ''x'' isolated in ''C''. So the singleton \ is both open in ''C'' (because ''x'' is isolated) and closed in ''C'' (because of the T1 property). Because ''C'' is connected, it must be equal to \. This shows that every connected component of ''X'' has a single point.) * Every
second countable In topology, a second-countable space, also called a completely separable space, is a topological space whose topology has a countable base. More explicitly, a topological space T is second-countable if there exists some countable collection \mat ...
scattered space is
countable In mathematics, a set is countable if either it is finite or it can be made in one to one correspondence with the set of natural numbers. Equivalently, a set is ''countable'' if there exists an injective function from it into the natural numbers ...
. * Every topological space ''X'' can be written in a unique way as the disjoint union of a
perfect set In general topology, a subset of a topological space is perfect if it is closed and has no isolated points. Equivalently: the set S is perfect if S=S', where S' denotes the set of all Limit point, limit points of S, also known as the derived set ...
and a scattered set. * Every second countable space ''X'' can be written in a unique way as the disjoint union of a perfect set and a countable scattered open set. (''Proof:'' Use the perfect + scattered decomposition and the fact above about second countable scattered spaces, together with the fact that a subset of a second countable space is second countable.) Furthermore, every closed subset of a second countable ''X'' can be written uniquely as the disjoint union of a perfect subset of ''X'' and a countable scattered subset of ''X''. This holds in particular in any
Polish space In the mathematical discipline of general topology, a Polish space is a separable completely metrizable topological space; that is, a space homeomorphic to a complete metric space that has a countable dense subset. Polish spaces are so named be ...
, which is the contents of the
Cantor–Bendixson theorem In descriptive set theory, a subset of a Polish space has the perfect set property if it is either countable or has a nonempty perfect subset (Kechris 1995, p. 150). Note that having the perfect set property is not the same as being a p ...
.


Notes


References

* Engelking, Ryszard, ''General Topology'', Heldermann Verlag Berlin, 1989. * * {{Citation , last=Willard , first=Stephen , title=General Topology , origyear=1970 , publisher=Addison-Wesley , edition= Dover reprint of 1970 , year=2004 Properties of topological spaces