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We give next a result that clarifies to some extent the connection between open sets and closed sets. Always remember that there are sets that are neither open nor closed, and just because a set is not open does not mean that it is closed.
A subset of ( ) is open if and only if its complement ( ) is closed.
First, assume that is open, and let us show that is closed. Suppose not. We will derive a contradiction.Suppose then that there is a sequence of elements of that converges to a number that is not in i.e., is an element of Since every element of is an interior point of there must exist an such that the entire disk (or interval ) is a subset of Now, since there must exist an such that for every In particular, i.e., belongs to (or ). This implies that But and this is a contradiction. Hence, if is open, then is closed.
Conversely, assume that is closed, and let us show that must be open. Again we argue by contradiction.Thus, assuming that is not open, there must exist a point that is not an interior point of Hence, for every the disk (or interval ) is not entirely contained in So, for each positive integer there must exist a point such that and It follows then that and that each Since is a closed set, we must have that But and we have arrived at the desired contradiction. Hence, if is closed, then is open, and the theorem is proved.
The theorem below, the famous Heine-Borel Theorem, gives an equivalent and different description of closed and bounded sets.This description is in terms of open sets, whereas the original definitions were interms of limit points.Any time we can find two very different descriptions of the same phenomenon, we have found something useful.
Let be a subset of (respectively By an open cover of we mean a sequence of open subsets of (respectively ) such that i.e., for every there exists an such that
A subset of (respectively ) is called compact , or is said to satisfy the Heine-Borel property , if every open cover of has a finite subcover. That is, if is an open cover of then there exists an integer such that In other words, only a finite number of the open sets are necessary to cover
REMARK The definition we have given here for a set being compact is a little less general from the one found in books on topology.We have restricted the notion of an open cover to be a sequence of open sets, while in the general setting an opencover is just a collection of open sets. The distinction between a sequence of open sets and a collection of open setsis genuine in general topology, but it can be disregarded in the case of the topological spaces and
A subset of (respectively ) is compact if and only if it is a closed and bounded set.
We prove this theorem for subsets of and leave the proof for subsets of to the exercises.
Suppose first that is compact, i.e., satisfies the Heine-Borel property. For each positive integer define to be the open set Then because Hence, by the Heine-Borel property, there must exist an such that But then implying that is bounded. Indeed, for all
Next, still assuming that is compact, we will show that is closed by showing that is open. Thus, let be an element of For each positive integer define to be the complement of the closed set Then each is an open set by Theorem 2.12, and we claim that is an open cover of Indeed, if then and Choose an so that Then implying that This proves our claim that is an open cover of Now, by the Heine-Borel property, there exists an such that But this implies that for every we must have and this implies that the disk is entirely contained in Therefore, every element of is an interior point of So, is open, whence is closed. This finishes the proof that compact sets are necessarily closed and bounded.
Conversely, assume that is both closed and bounded. We must show that satisfies the Heine-Borel property. Suppose not. Then, there exists an open cover that has no finite subcover. So, for each positive integer there must exist an element for which Otherwise, there would be a finite subcover. By [link] , there exists a subsequence of that converges to an element of Now, because is an open cover of there must exist an such that Because is open, there exists an so that the entire disk is contained in Since there exists a so that if Therefore, if then But the sequence is strictly increasing, so that there exists a such that and by the choice of the point we know that We have arrived at a contradiction, and so the second half of the theorem is proved.
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