Erdős space

Totally disconnected topological space

In mathematics, Erdős space is a topological space named after Paul Erdős, who described it in 1940.[1] Erdős space is defined as a subspace E 2 {\displaystyle E\subset \ell ^{2}} of the Hilbert space of square summable sequences, consisting of the sequences whose elements are all rational numbers.

Erdős space is a totally disconnected, one-dimensional topological space.[1] The space E {\displaystyle E} is homeomorphic to E × E {\displaystyle E\times E} in the product topology. If the set of all homeomorphisms of the Euclidean space R n {\displaystyle \mathbb {R} ^{n}} (for n 2 {\displaystyle n\geq 2} ) that leave invariant the set Q n {\displaystyle \mathbb {Q} ^{n}} of rational vectors is endowed with the compact-open topology, it becomes homeomorphic to the Erdős space.[2]

Erdős space also surfaces in complex dynamics via iteration of the function f ( z ) = e z 1 {\displaystyle f(z)=e^{z}-1} . Let f n {\displaystyle f^{n}} denote the n {\displaystyle n} -fold composition of f {\displaystyle f} . The set of all points z C {\displaystyle z\in \mathbb {C} } such that Im ( f n ( z ) ) {\displaystyle {\text{Im}}(f^{n}(z))\to \infty } is a collection of pairwise disjoint rays (homeomorphic copies of [ 0 , ) {\displaystyle [0,\infty )} ), each joining an endpoint in C {\displaystyle \mathbb {C} } to the point at infinity. The set of finite endpoints is homeomorphic to Erdős space E {\displaystyle E} .[3]

See also

  • List of topologies – List of concrete topologies and topological spaces

References

  1. ^ a b Erdős, Paul (1940), "The dimension of the rational points in Hilbert space" (PDF), Annals of Mathematics, Second Series, 41 (4): 734–736, doi:10.2307/1968851, JSTOR 1968851, MR 0003191
  2. ^ Dijkstra, Jan J.; van Mill, Jan (2010), "Erdős space and homeomorphism groups of manifolds" (PDF), Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society, 208 (979), doi:10.1090/S0065-9266-10-00579-X, ISBN 978-0-8218-4635-3, MR 2742005
  3. ^ Lipham, David S. (2020-05-09). "Erdős space in Julia sets". arXiv:2004.12976 [math.DS].


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