Invariance of domain

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Template:Short description Invariance of domain is a theorem in topology about homeomorphic subsets of Euclidean space n. It states:

If U is an open subset of n and f:Un is an injective continuous map, then V:=f(U) is open in n and f is a homeomorphism between U and V.

The theorem and its proof are due to L. E. J. Brouwer, published in 1912.[1] The proof uses tools of algebraic topology, notably the Brouwer fixed point theorem.

Notes

The conclusion of the theorem can equivalently be formulated as: "f is an open map".

Normally, to check that f is a homeomorphism, one would have to verify that both f and its inverse function f1 are continuous; the theorem says that if the domain is an Template:Em subset of n and the image is also in n, then continuity of f1 is automatic. Furthermore, the theorem says that if two subsets U and V of n are homeomorphic, and U is open, then V must be open as well. (Note that V is open as a subset of n, and not just in the subspace topology. Openness of V in the subspace topology is automatic.) Both of these statements are not at all obvious and are not generally true if one leaves Euclidean space.

Not a homeomorphism onto its image
An injective map which is not a homeomorphism onto its image: g:(1.1,1)2 with g(t)=(t21,t3t).

It is of crucial importance that both domain and image of f are contained in Euclidean space Template:Em. Consider for instance the map f:(0,1)2 defined by f(t)=(t,0). This map is injective and continuous, the domain is an open subset of , but the image is not open in 2. A more extreme example is the map g:(1.1,1)2 defined by g(t)=(t21,t3t) because here g is injective and continuous but does not even yield a homeomorphism onto its image.

The theorem is also not generally true in infinitely many dimensions. Consider for instance the Banach [[lp space|Template:Mvar space]] of all bounded real sequences. Define f: as the shift f(x1,x2,)=(0,x1,x2,). Then f is injective and continuous, the domain is open in , but the image is not.

Consequences

If n>m, there exists no continuous injective map f:Um for a nonempty open set Un. To see this, suppose there exists such a map f. Composing f with the standard inclusion of m into n would give a continuous injection from n to itself, but with an image with empty interior in n. This would contradict invariance of domain.

In particular, if nm, no nonempty open subset of n can be homeomorphic to an open subset of m.

And n is not homeomorphic to m if nm.

Generalizations

The domain invariance theorem may be generalized to manifolds: if M and N are topological Template:Mvar-manifolds without boundary and f:MN is a continuous map which is locally one-to-one (meaning that every point in M has a neighborhood such that f restricted to this neighborhood is injective), then f is an open map (meaning that f(U) is open in N whenever U is an open subset of M) and a local homeomorphism.

There are also generalizations to certain types of continuous maps from a Banach space to itself.[2]

See also

Notes

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References

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External links

Template:Topology

  1. Template:Ifsubst Beweis der Invarianz des n-dimensionalen Gebiets, Mathematische Annalen 71 (1912), pages 305–315; see also 72 (1912), pages 55–56
  2. Template:Ifsubst Topologie des espaces abstraits de M. Banach. C. R. Acad. Sci. Paris, 200 (1935) pages 1083–1093