Path-connected space: Difference between revisions
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===Symbol-free definition=== | ===Symbol-free definition=== | ||
A [[topological space]] is said to be '''path-connected''' or ''arc-wise connected | A [[topological space]] is said to be '''path-connected''' or ''arc-wise connected'' if given any two points on the topological space, there is a [[path]] (or an '''arc''') starting at one point and ending at the other. | ||
===Definition with symbols=== | ===Definition with symbols=== |
Revision as of 10:20, 20 August 2007
This article defines a property of topological spaces: a property that can be evaluated to true/false for any topological space|View a complete list of properties of topological spaces
This is a variation of connectedness. View other variations of connectedness
This article is about a basic definition in topology.
VIEW: Definitions built on this | Facts about this | Survey articles about this
View a complete list of basic definitions in topology
Definition
Symbol-free definition
A topological space is said to be path-connected or arc-wise connected if given any two points on the topological space, there is a path (or an arc) starting at one point and ending at the other.
Definition with symbols
A topological space is said to be path-connected if for any two points there is a continuous map such that and .
Relation with other properties
Weaker properties
- Connected space: For full proof, refer: Path-connected implies connected
Metaproperties
Products
This property of topological spaces is closed under taking arbitrary products
View all properties of topological spaces closed under products
A direct product of path-connected spaces is path-connected. This is true both for finite and infinite direct products (using the product topology for infinite direct products).
Coarsening
This property of topological spaces is preserved under coarsening, viz, if a set with a given topology has the property, the same set with a coarser topology also has the property
Shifting to a coarser topology preserves the property of being path-connected. This is because a path in a finer topology continues to remain a path in a coarser topology -- we simply compose with the identity map from the finer to the coarser topology (which, by definition, must be continuous).
Template:Connected union-closed
A union of a family of path-connected subsets having nonempty intersection, is path-connected.