Complete metric space: Difference between revisions

From Citizendium
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Richard Pinch
(added section on topological completeness)
imported>Richard Pinch
(→‎Topologically complete space: example showing that completeness is not a topological property)
Line 18: Line 18:


==Topologically complete space==
==Topologically complete space==
A [[topological space]] is ''metrically topologically complete'' if it is [[homeomorphism|homeoemorphic]] to a complete metric space.  A topological condition for this property is that the space be [[metrisable space|metrisable]] and an ''absolute G<sub>δ</sub>'', that is, a [[G-delta set|G<sub>δ</sub>]] in every topological space in which it can be embedded.
Completeness is not a [[topological property]]: it is possible for a complete metric space to be [[homeomorphism|homeomorphic]] to a metric space which is not complete.  For example, the map
 
:<math> t \leftrightarrow \left(\frac{2t}{1+t^2},\frac{1-t^2}{1+t^2}\right) </math>
 
is a homeomorphism between the complete metric space '''R''' and the incomplete space which is the [[unit circle]] in the [[Euclidean plane]] with the point (0,-1) deleted.  The latter space is not complete as the non-Cauchy sequence corresponding to ''t''=''n'' as ''n'' runs through the [[positive integer]]s is mapped to a non-convergent Cauchy sequence on the circle. 
 
We can define a [[topological space]] to be ''metrically topologically complete'' if it is homeomorphic to a complete metric space.  A topological condition for this property is that the space be [[metrizable space|metrizable]] and an ''absolute G<sub>δ</sub>'', that is, a [[G-delta set|G<sub>δ</sub>]] in every topological space in which it can be embedded.


==See also==
==See also==
* [[Banach space]]
* [[Banach space]]
* [[Hilbert space]]
* [[Hilbert space]]

Revision as of 06:13, 4 January 2009

This article is a stub and thus not approved.
Main Article
Discussion
Related Articles  [?]
Bibliography  [?]
External Links  [?]
Citable Version  [?]
 
This editable Main Article is under development and subject to a disclaimer.

In mathematics, completeness is a property ascribed to a metric space in which every Cauchy sequence in that space is convergent. In other words, every Cauchy sequence in the metric space tends in the limit to a point which is again an element of that space. Hence the metric space is, in a sense, "complete."

Formal definition

Let X be a metric space with metric d. Then X is complete if for every Cauchy sequence there is an associated element such that .

Examples

  • The real numbers R, and more generally finite-dimensional Euclidean spaces, with the usual metric are complete.
  • Any compact metric space is sequentially compact and hence complete. The converse does not hold: for example, R is complete but not compact.
  • In a space with the discrete metric, the only Cauchy sequences are those which are constant from some point on. Hence any discrete metric space is complete.

Completion

Every metric space X has a completion which is a complete metric space in which X is isometrically embedded as a dense subspace. The completion has a universal property.

Examples

  • The real numbers R are the completion of the rational numbers Q with respect to the usual metric of absolute distance.

Topologically complete space

Completeness is not a topological property: it is possible for a complete metric space to be homeomorphic to a metric space which is not complete. For example, the map

is a homeomorphism between the complete metric space R and the incomplete space which is the unit circle in the Euclidean plane with the point (0,-1) deleted. The latter space is not complete as the non-Cauchy sequence corresponding to t=n as n runs through the positive integers is mapped to a non-convergent Cauchy sequence on the circle.

We can define a topological space to be metrically topologically complete if it is homeomorphic to a complete metric space. A topological condition for this property is that the space be metrizable and an absolute Gδ, that is, a Gδ in every topological space in which it can be embedded.

See also