User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
homeomorphisms- Plural of homeomorphism
Extensive Definition
distinguish homomorphism
- Topological equivalence redirects here; see also topological equivalence (dynamical systems).
Roughly speaking, a topological space is a
geometric object, and
the homeomorphism is a continuous stretching and bending of the
object into a new shape. Thus, a square
and a circle are
homeomorphic to each other, but a sphere and a donut are not. An often-repeated
joke is that topologists can't tell the coffee cup from which they
are drinking from the donut they are eating, since a sufficiently
pliable donut could be reshaped to the form of a coffee cup by
creating a dimple and progressively enlarging it, while shrinking
the hole into a handle.
Intuitively, a homeomorphism maps points in the
first object that are "close together" to points in the second
object that are close together, and points in the first object that
are not close together to points in the second object that are not
close together. Topology is the study of those properties of
objects that do not change when homeomorphisms are applied.
Definition
A function f between two topological spaces X and Y is called a homeomorphism if it has the following properties:- f is a bijection (1-1 and onto),
- f is continuous,
- the inverse function f −1 is continuous (f is an open mapping).
If such a function exists, we say X and Y are
homeomorphic. A self-homeomorphism is a homeomorphism of a
topological space and itself. The homeomorphisms form an equivalence
relation on the class
of all topological spaces. The resulting equivalence
classes are called homeomorphism classes.
Examples
- The unit 2-disc D2 and the unit square in R2 are homeomorphic.
- The open interval (−1, 1) is homeomorphic to the real numbers R.
- The product space S1 × S1 and the two-dimensional torus are homeomorphic.
- Every uniform isomorphism and isometric isomorphism is a homeomorphism.
- \mathbb^ and \mathbb^ are not homeomorphic for n\neq m
Notes
The third requirement, that f −1 be continuous, is essential. Consider for instance the function f : [0, 2π) → S1 defined by f(φ) = (cos(φ), sin(φ)). This function is bijective and continuous, but not a homeomorphism.Homeomorphisms are the isomorphisms in the
category of topological spaces. As such, the composition of two
homeomorphisms is again a homeomorphism, and the set of all
self-homeomorphisms X → X forms a group,
called the homeomorphism group of X, often denoted Homeo(X).
For some purposes, the homeomorphism group
happens to be too big, but by means of the isotopy relation, one can reduce
this group to the mapping
class group.
Properties
- Two homeomorphic spaces share the same topological properties. For example, if one of them is compact, then the other is as well; if one of them is connected, then the other is as well; if one of them is Hausdorff, then the other is as well; their homology groups will coincide. Note however that this does not extend to properties defined via a metric; there are metric spaces which are homeomorphic even though one of them is complete and the other is not.
- A homeomorphism is simultaneously an open mapping and a closed mapping, that is it maps open sets to open sets and closed sets to closed sets.
- Every self-homeomorphism in S^1 can be extended to a self-homeomorphism of the whole disk D^2 (Alexander's Trick).
Informal discussion
The intuitive criterion of stretching, bending, cutting and gluing back together takes a certain amount of practice to apply correctly — it may not be obvious from the description above that deforming a line segment to a point is impermissible, for instance. It is thus important to realize that it is the formal definition given above that counts.This characterization of a homeomorphism often
leads to confusion with the concept of homotopy, which is actually
defined as a continuous deformation, but from one function to
another, rather than one space to another. In the case of a
homeomorphism, envisioning a continuous deformation is a mental
tool for keeping track of which points on space X correspond to
which points on Y — one just follows them as X deforms.
In the case of homotopy, the continuous deformation from one map to
the other is of the essence, and it is also less restrictive, since
none of the maps involved need to be one-to-one or onto. Homotopy
does lead to a relation on spaces: homotopy
equivalence.
There is a name for the kind of deformation
involved in visualizing a homeomorphism. It is (except when cutting
and regluing are required) an isotopy between the identity map
on X and the homeomorphism from X to Y.
See also
- Local homeomorphism
- Diffeomorphism
- Uniform isomorphism is an isomorphism between uniform spaces
- Isometric isomorphism is an isomorphism between metric spaces
- Dehn twist
- Homeomorphism (graph theory) (closely related to graph subdivision)
- Isotopy
- Mapping class group
External links
homeomorphisms in Arabic: دالة هميومورفية
homeomorphisms in Catalan: Homeomorfisme
homeomorphisms in Czech: Homeomorfismus
homeomorphisms in Danish: Homeomorfi
homeomorphisms in German: Homöomorphismus
homeomorphisms in Spanish: Homeomorfismo
homeomorphisms in French: Homéomorphisme
homeomorphisms in Hungarian: Homeomorfia
homeomorphisms in Korean: 위상동형사상
homeomorphisms in Italian: Omeomorfismo
homeomorphisms in Hebrew: הומיאומורפיזם
homeomorphisms in Georgian: ჰომეომორფიზმი
homeomorphisms in Lithuanian:
Homeomorfizmas
homeomorphisms in Dutch: Homeomorfisme
homeomorphisms in Japanese: 位相同型
homeomorphisms in Polish: Homeomorfizm
homeomorphisms in Portuguese:
Homeomorfismo
homeomorphisms in Russian: Гомеоморфизм
homeomorphisms in Slovenian: Homeomorfizem
homeomorphisms in Serbian: Хомеоморфизам
homeomorphisms in Finnish: Homeomorfismi
homeomorphisms in Swedish: Homeomorfi
homeomorphisms in Tamil: இடவியல்
உருமாற்றம்
homeomorphisms in Turkish: Homeomorfizma
homeomorphisms in Ukrainian: Гомеоморфізм
homeomorphisms in Vietnamese: Phép đồng
phôi
homeomorphisms in Chinese: 同胚