Compact space: Difference between revisions

From Citizendium
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Hendra I. Nurdin
(added cats)
imported>Hendra I. Nurdin
Line 6: Line 6:


==Formal definition of compact set==
==Formal definition of compact set==
A subset ''A'' of a set ''X'' is said to be '''compact''' if ''every'' cover of ''A'' has a ''finite'' subcover, that is, a sub-cover which contains at most a finite number of subsets of ''X'' (or has a finite index set).
A subset ''A'' of a set ''X'' is said to be '''compact''' if ''every'' cover of ''A'' has a ''finite'' subcover, that is, a subcover which contains at most a finite number of subsets of ''X'' (or has a finite index set).


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 18:12, 24 September 2007

In mathematics, a compact set is a set for which every covering of that set by a collection of sets has a finite subcovering. If the set is a subset of a metric space then compactness is equivalent to the set being closed and totally bounded or, equivalently, that every sequence in the set has a convergent subsequence. For the special case that the set is a subset of a finite dimensional vector space, such as the Euclidean spaces, then compactness is equivalent to that set being closed and bounded.

Cover and subcover of a set

Let A be a subset of a set X. A cover for A is any collection of sets of the form , where is an arbitrary index set, such that . For any such cover , a set of the form with and such that is said to be a subcover of .


Formal definition of compact set

A subset A of a set X is said to be compact if every cover of A has a finite subcover, that is, a subcover which contains at most a finite number of subsets of X (or has a finite index set).

See also

Open set

Closed set

Topological space