Quasicomponent: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
|||
Line 17: | Line 17: | ||
==Related notions== | ==Related notions== | ||
* [[Connected component]] is a | * [[Connected component]] is a maximal non-empty connected subset. In general, each quasicomponent is a union of connected components. In other words, the equivalence relation defining quasicomponents is coarser than the equivalence relation defining connected components. {{further|[[quasicomponent is union of connected components]]}} | ||
* Any [[open connected component]] is a quasicomponent. In particular, a [[locally connected space]] is a [[space in which all connected components are open]], and hence the connected components are all open and hence coincide with the quasicomponents. |
Latest revision as of 00:19, 28 January 2012
Definition
Definition in terms of equivalence relation
Consider the following relation on a topological space . For points , we say if it is not possible to write as a union of disjoint open subsets with .
This relation is an equivalence relation and the equivalence classes in under the relation are termed the quasicomponents of .
Definition as intersection of clopen subsets
For a topological space , the quasicomponent of a point is defined as the intersection of all the clopen subsets containing .
Equivalence of definitions
Further information: equivalence of definitions of quasicomponent
Related notions
- Connected component is a maximal non-empty connected subset. In general, each quasicomponent is a union of connected components. In other words, the equivalence relation defining quasicomponents is coarser than the equivalence relation defining connected components. Further information: quasicomponent is union of connected components
- Any open connected component is a quasicomponent. In particular, a locally connected space is a space in which all connected components are open, and hence the connected components are all open and hence coincide with the quasicomponents.