Metric space: Difference between revisions

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==Facts==
==Facts==


The metric is a jointly continuous function from the metric space to <math>\R</math>. This follows from the various axioms for the function.
* The metric is a jointly continuous function from the metric space to <math>\R</math>. This follows from the various axioms for the function. {{proofat|[[Metric is jointly continuous]]}}
* The topology arising from the metric induced no a subspace (by restricting the metric from the whole space) is the same as the [[subspace topology]] arising from the whole space. {{proofat|[[topology from subspace metric equals subspace topology]]}}

Revision as of 18:04, 18 January 2008

Definition

A metric space is a set X along with a distance function d:X×XR such that the following hold:

  • d(x,y)0 (non-negativity)
  • d(x,x)=0x=0 (identity of indiscernibles)
  • d(x,y)=d(y,x) (symmetry)
  • d(x,y)+d(y,z)d(x,z) (triangle inequality)

A distance function satisfying all the above three conditions is termed a metric.

Induced topology

There is a natural induced topology on any metric space: the topology whose basis is open balls of positive radii about points in the metric space. Here, by open ball of radius r about x we mean the set of points y such that d(x,y)<r.

A topological space which arises via the induced topology on a metric space, is termed metrizable. There may be many different metrics yielding the same topology, for instance the taxicab metric and the Euclidean metric for Euclidean space.

Facts