Euclidean point: Difference between revisions

From Topospaces
No edit summary
 
m (1 revision)
 
(No difference)

Latest revision as of 19:43, 11 May 2008

This article defines a property that one can talk about for a pair of a topological space and a point in it

Definition

A point in a topological space is termed a m-Euclidean point if it satisfies the following equivalent conditions:

  • It has a neighbourhood (open set containing it) that is homeomorphic to Rm
  • It has a neighbourhood (open set containing it) that is homeomorphic to an open set in Rm
  • Every neighbourhood of it contains a smaller neighbourhood homeomorphic to an open set in Rm
  • Every neighbourhood of it contains a smaller neighbourhood homeomorphic to Rm

A point is Euclidean if it is m-Euclidean for some m. A point cannot be m-Euclidean and n-Euclidean for mn.

Relation with other properties

Stronger properties

Facts

  • In a locally Euclidean space, and more specifically in a manifold, every point is Euclidean (in fact, since locally Euclidean spaces are T1, every point is closed Euclidean).