nLab syntopogenous space

Redirected from "symmetric syntopogeny".
Syntopogenous spaces

Context

Topology

topology (point-set topology, point-free topology)

see also differential topology, algebraic topology, functional analysis and topological homotopy theory

Introduction

Basic concepts

Universal constructions

Extra stuff, structure, properties

Examples

Basic statements

Theorems

Analysis Theorems

topological homotopy theory

Syntopogenous spaces

Idea

A syntopogenous space is a common generalization of topological spaces, proximity spaces, and uniform spaces. The category of syntopogenous spaces includes TopTop, ProxProx, and UnifUnif as full subcategories whose intersection is fairly trivial.

Definitions

Topogenous relations

We work with binary relations on the power set P(X)P(X) of a set XX. As for proximity spaces, there are three styles of such relation that are classically inter-definable, but in constructive mathematics the choice matters. They are notated by AδBA \;\delta\; B, ABA\bowtie B, and ABA\ll B; the relationship between them classically is that \bowtie is the negation of δ\delta, while ABA\ll B means A(XB)A \bowtie (X\setminus B).

A relation δ\delta on P(X)P(X) is called topogenous (or a topogenous nearness) if it satisfies:

  1. Nontriviality or reflexivity: if ABA \cap B is inhabited, then AδBA \;\delta\; B.

  2. Binary additivity: Aδ(BC)A \;\delta\; (B \cup C) if and only if AδBA \;\delta\; B or AδCA \;\delta\; C; and (AB)δC(A \cup B) \;\delta\; C if and only if AδCA \;\delta\; C or BδCB \;\delta\; C.

  3. Nullary additivity: it is never true that AδA \;\delta\; \emptyset or δA\emptyset \;\delta\; A for any AA.

Note that the “if” directions of binary additivity are equivalent to isotony: if ABδCDA \supseteq B \;\delta\; C \subseteq D implies AδDA \;\delta\; D. We might specify these separately and call only the reverse direction of binary additivity ‘binary additivity’.

A relation satisfying merely (2) and (3) is called a topogeny (between P(X)P(X) and itself) at topogeny; it is slightly easier to work with the lattice of topogenies than the lattice of topogenous relations, but syntopogenous spaces are built only out of those topogenies that satisfy (1).

Remark

As is shown at topogeny, a topogenous nearness can also be regarded as equivalent to a reflexive relation from βX\beta X to βX\beta X (see ultrafilter monad) in the pretopos of compact Hausdorff spaces. In more concrete terms: each topogeny δ\delta is a union of “basic topogenies” which are those of the form 𝒰×𝒱PX×PX\mathcal{U} \times \mathcal{V} \subset P X \times P X where 𝒰,𝒱\mathcal{U}, \mathcal{V} are ultrafilters, and the set of all pairs (𝒰,𝒱)(\mathcal{U}, \mathcal{V}) whose product is contained in δ\delta forms a closed subspace of βX×βX\beta X \times \beta X.

The axioms of a topogenous nearness can be reinterpreted in terms of \bowtie to yield a topogenous apartness, satisfying

  1. Nontriviality or reflexivity: if ABA\bowtie B, then AB=A \cap B = \emptyset.

  2. Binary additivity: A(BC)A \bowtie (B \cup C) if and only if ABA \bowtie B and ACA \bowtie C; and (AB)C(A \cup B) \bowtie C if and only if ACA \bowtie C and BCB \bowtie C.

  3. Nullary additivity: it is always true that AA \bowtie \emptyset and A\emptyset \bowtie A for any AA.

Similarly, in terms of \ll we obtain a topogenous order or topogenous neighborhood relation:

  1. Nontriviality or reflexivity: if ABA\ll B, then ABA\subseteq B.

  2. Binary additivity: A(BC)A \ll (B \cap C) if and only if ABA \ll B and ACA \ll C; and (AB)C(A \cup B) \ll C if and only if ACA \ll C and BCB \ll C.

  3. Nullary additivity: it is always true that AXA \ll X and A\emptyset \ll A for any AA.

The set of topogenous nearness relations on XX, ordered by containment, is a complete lattice, as is the set of topogenies. (If we are working with topogenous apartnesses \bowtie or orders \ll instead of nearnesses δ\delta, then the order relation in these lattices is reversed).

  • The least element is the discrete topogenous relation, defined by AδBA \;\delta\; B if and only if ABA \cap B is inhabited. (In the set of topogenies, the least element is the trivial topogeny, in which AδBA \;\delta\; B never holds.)
  • The greatest element is the codiscrete topogenous relation (also the cotrivial topogeny), defined by AδBA \;\delta\; B if and only if both AA and BB are inhabited.
  • The union of any inhabited set of topogenous relations is topogenous, hence is a join. To treat inhabited joins and the nullary join (the least element) uniformly, we can take the union of the topogenous relations and the discrete topogenous relation. (With topogenies, we can just take the union, period.)
  • The intersection of a directed set of topogenous relations (or topogenies) is again a topogenous relation (or topogeny) and so is a meet. (This is not provable constructively for topogenous nearnesses δ\delta, but the opposite facts for \bowtie and \ll are: directed unions of topogenous apartnesses and topogenous orders are again such.)
  • In general, the intersection of two topogenous relations is not topogenous (or even a topogeny); however, they still have a meet: AδBA \;\delta\; B (where δ\delta is the meet of δ 1\delta_1 and δ 2\delta_2) iff, whenever A= i=1 nA iA = \bigcup_{i=1}^n A_i and B= j=1 mB jB = \bigcup_{j=1}^m B_j, there exist ii and jj such that A iδ 1B jA_i \;\delta_1\; B_j and A iδ 2B jA_i \;\delta_2\; B_j.

From binary meets (just above), directed meets (above that) and nullary meets (the greatest element), we get all meets (even constructively). But the meet of an arbitrary set 𝒟\mathcal{D} of topogenous relations (or topogenies) can still be easily described explicitly: we have A(𝒟)BA \;(\bigwedge\mathcal{D})\;B if and only if whenever A= i=1 nA iA = \bigcup_{i=1}^n A_i and B= j=1 mB jB = \bigcup_{j=1}^m B_j, there exist ii and jj such that A iδB jA_i \;\delta\; B_j for all δ𝒟\delta\in\mathcal{D}.

The opposite relation of a topogenous relation is again topogenous. A topogenous relation (or topogeny) is called symmetric if it is equal to its opposite, i.e. if AδBA \;\delta\; B if and only if BδAB \;\delta\; A. This is easy to reexpress in terms of \bowtie. For \ll the corresponding fact would be ABA \ll B if, or if and only if, (XB)(XA)(X\setminus B)\ll (X\setminus A); but constructively the first is too weak and the second too strong.

A topogenous relation is called perfect if AδBA \;\delta\; B implies there exists an xAx \in A with {x}δB\{x\} \;\delta\; B. It is called biperfect if both it and its opposite are perfect. Of course, a symmetric perfect topogenous relation is automatically biperfect. Similarly, a topogenous apartness is perfect if {x}B\{x\}\bowtie B for all xAx\in A implies ABA\bowtie B, and a topogenous order is perfect if {x}B\{x\}\ll B for all xAx\in A implies ABA\ll B. Biperfection for a topogenous order is better expressed without reference to opposites as “if AB iA\ll B_i for all ii, then A iB iA\ll \bigcap_i B_i”.

Syntopogenous spaces

A syntopogeny (or syntopogenous structure) on a set XX is a filter 𝒪\mathcal{O} of topogenous nearness relations such that

  • For any δ𝒪\delta\in \mathcal{O}, there exists a δ𝒪\delta'\in\mathcal{O} such that if A,BXA,B\subseteq X have the property that for any DXD\subseteq X, either Aδ(XD)A\;\delta'\; (X\setminus D) or DδBD\;\delta'\; B, then AδBA\;\delta\; B.

If we are working with apartnesses \bowtie or orders \ll, then we instead ask for an ideal satisfying the analogous properties:

  • For any 𝒪\bowtie \in \mathcal{O}, there exists a 𝒪\bowtie'\in \mathcal{O} such that if ABA\bowtie B, then there exists DXD\subseteq X such that A(XD)A\bowtie' (X\setminus D) and DBD\bowtie' B.

  • For any 𝒪\ll\in\mathcal{O}, there exists an 𝒪\ll'\in \mathcal{O} such that if ABA\ll B, then there exists DXD\subseteq X such that ADBA\ll' D \ll' B.

If we have been working with the lattice of topogenies rather than topogenous relations, then we must explicitly state here that every topogeny in 𝒪\mathcal{O} satisfies (1). This requirement actually joins with the requirement above to form an unbiased definition that is nicely expressed in terms of topogenous orders \ll (and tacitly using isotony to show the equivalence):

  • For each natural number nn and each \ll in the syntopogeny 𝒪\mathcal{O}, there is an \ll' in 𝒪\mathcal{O} such that, whenever ABA \ll B, there is a list C 0,,C nC_0, \ldots, C_n such that AC 0C 1C nBA \subseteq C_0 \ll' C_1 \cdots \ll' C_n \subseteq B.

A basis for a syntopogeny on XX is a filterbase in the complete lattice of topogenous relations (or of topogenies), such that the filter it generates is a syntopogeny. When XX is equipped with a syntopogeny, it is called a syntopogenous space. In constructive mathematics, where it matters whether we choose δ\delta, \bowtie, or \ll, we may speak for emphasis of syntopogenous nearness spaces, syntopogenous apartness spaces, or syntopogenous neighborhood spaces.

A syntopogeny is called symmetric, perfect, or biperfect if it admits a basis consisting of symmetric, perfect, or biperfect topogenous relations, respectively. It is called simple if it admits a basis that is a singleton (which must then be a quasiproximity, and a proximity in the symmetric case).

Syntopogenous functions

If δ\delta is a topogenous relation on YY and f:XYf:X\to Y is a function, then we have a topogenous relation f *δf^*\delta on XX defined by A(f *δ)BA\;(f^*\delta)\;B iff f(A)δf(B)f(A) \;\delta\; f(B). That is, f *Δ=( f× f) 1(δ)f^*\Delta = (\exists_f \times \exists_f)^{-1}(\delta), where f:P(X)P(Y)\exists_f : P(X) \to P(Y) is the left adjoint of f 1:P(Y)P(X)f^{-1}:P(Y) \to P(X).

Now if (X 1,𝒪 1)(X_1,\mathcal{O}_1) and (X 2,𝒪 2)(X_2,\mathcal{O}_2) are syntopogenous spaces, a function f:X 1X 2f:X_1\to X_2 is called syntopogenous, or syntopologically continuous, if for any δ𝒪 2\delta\in\mathcal{O}_2, we have f *δ𝒪 1f^*\delta\in\mathcal{O}_1. This defines the category STpgSTpg.

If (Y,𝒪)(Y,\mathcal{O}) is a syntopogenous space, then the collection {f *δ|δ𝒪}\{ f^*\delta | \delta\in\mathcal{O}\} is a basis for a syntopogeny on XX, which is the initial structure induced on XX by ff. The operation of taking initial structures, as a map from syntopogenies on YY to syntopogenies on XX, preserves opposites, simplicity, meets, symmetry, and perfectness.

More generally, if (Y i,𝒪 i)(Y_i,\mathcal{O}_i) is a family of syntopogenous spaces and f i:XY if_i:X\to Y_i are functions, then the meet of the initial structures induced by all the f if_i is the initial structure induced by them jointly. Thus, STpgSetSTpg\to Set is a topological concrete category.

Relation to other topological structures

Topological spaces

If XX is a topological space, we define AδBA\;\delta\; B to hold if AB¯A\cap \overline{B} is inhabited, where B¯\overline{B} denotes the closure of BB. This is a basis for a simple perfect syntopogeny.

Conversely, given a simple perfect syntopogeny, with singleton basis {δ}\{\delta\}, we define B¯={x|{x}δB}\overline{B} = \{ x | \{x\}\;\delta\; B \}; then this is a Kuratowski closure operator and hence defines a topology.

These constructions define an equivalence of categories between Top and the full subcategory of STpgSTpg on the simple, perfect, syntopogenous spaces.

In constructive mathematics, the three kinds of (simple, perfect) syntopogenous spaces can be identified with three no-longer-equivalent notions of “topological space”: the nearness ones correspond, as described above, with closure spaces?, the apartness ones with point-set apartness spaces, and the neighborhood onse with ordinary topological spaces.

Proximity spaces

A simple symmetric syntopogeny is easily seen to be precisely a proximity (of the appropriate sort: nearness, apartness, or neighborhood). In this way we have an equivalence of categories between ProxProx and the full subcategory of STpgSTpg on the simple, symmetric, syntopogenous spaces.

More generally, an arbitrary simple syntopogeny can be identified with a quasiproximity, and we have an equivalence of categories between QPrxoQPrxo and the subcategory of simple syntopogenous spaces.

Uniform spaces

If δ\delta is a biperfect topogenous relation, then we have AδBA\;\delta\;B if and only if there exist xAx\in A and yBy\in B with {x}δ{y}\{x\}\;\delta\;\{y\}. Therefore, δ\delta is completely determined by a binary relation UX×XU\subseteq X\times X on XX, which contains the diagonal Δ X\Delta_X. Conversely, any binary relation on XX containing the diagonal defines a biperfect topogenous relation. (For a biperfect topogeny, remove the requirement that UU contain the diagonal.)

It follows that biperfect syntopogenies are equivalent to quasi-uniformities, which are like uniformities but lack the symmetry axiom. We have an equivalence of categories between QUnifQUnif and the full subcategory of STpgSTpg on the biperfect syntopogenous spaces, which easily restricts to an equivalence between UnifUnif and the category of symmetric, (bi)perfect topogenous spaces.

Constructively, this equivalence still holds for both nearness and neighborhood syntopogenous spaces. In general, topogenous nearnesses and topogenous neighborhood relations are not equivalent, but a biperfect topogenous neighborhood relation is determined by giving for each xx the smallest set BB such that {x}B\{x\}\ll B, and as xx varies these sets again determine exactly a binary relation on XX (containing the diagonal). Syntopogenous apartness spaces, on the other hand, correspond to uniform apartness spaces.

Preorders and symmetric prosets

A syntopogeny which is both simple and biperfect is determined uniquely by a single relation on XX which must be both reflexive and transitive, i.e. a preorder. Thus, the intersection TopQUnifTop \cap QUnif inside STpgSTpg is equivalent to PreordPreord.

Of course, it follows that a simple, symmetric, (bi)perfect syntopogeny is determined uniquely by a relation on XX that is reflexive, transitive, and also symmetric – i.e. an equivalence relation. Thus, the intersections TopUnifTop \cap Unif, TopProxTop \cap Prox, and Prox(Q)UnifProx\cap (Q)Unif inside STpgSTpg are all equivalent to the category SymPreOrdSymPreOrd of symmetric prosets (sets equipped with an equivalence relation).

Some coreflections

In the preorder of topogenous relations on any set XX, the following sub-preorders are coreflective:

  • The symmetric elements. The symmetric coreflection of δ\delta is the meet δ sδδ op\delta^s \coloneqq \delta \wedge \delta^{op}.
  • The perfect elements. The perfect coreflection of δ\delta is defined by Aδ pBA\;\delta^p\;B iff there exists xAx\in A with {x}δB\{x\}\;\delta\;B.
  • The biperfect elements. The byperfect coreflection of δ\delta is defined by Aδ bBA\;\delta^b\;B iff there exist xAx\in A and yBy\in B with {x}δ{y}\{x\}\;\delta\;\{y\}.

It follows that in the preorder of syntopogenous structures on XX, the symmetric, perfect, and biperfect elements are also reflective; the coreflections are obtained by applying the above one to each topogenous relation in turn. Moreover, the simple syntopogenous structures on XX are also coreflective; the coreflection just takes the intersection of all relations belonging to the filter (this is a directed intersection, hence automatically again a topogenous relation — although constructively this only works in the dual cases of \bowtie and \ll).

Finally, for any function f:XYf:X\to Y, the preimage function f *f^*, mapping syntopogenous structures on YY to those on XX, preserves all of these coreflections. Therefore, the full subcategories of

  • simple (i.e. quasi-proximity),
  • symmetric,
  • perfect, and
  • biperfect (i.e. quasi-uniformity)

syntopogenous spaces are all coreflective in STpgSTpg, with coreflections written () t(-)^t, () s(-)^s, () p(-)^p, and () b(-)^b respectively.

In general, of course, coreflections into distinct subcategories do not commute or even preserve each other’s subcategories. However, by construction, we see that the coreflections () s(-)^s, () p(-)^p, and () b(-)^b all preserve simplicity. Therefore, the full subcategories of

  • simple symmetric (i.e. proximity),
  • simple perfect (i.e. topological), and
  • simple biperfect (i.e. preorders)

syntopogenous spaces are all coreflective in STpgSTpg, with coreflections () ts(-)^{t s}, () tp(-)^{t p}, and () tb(-)^{t b} respectively. Finally, it is evident by construction that () b(-)^b preserves symmetry, so the full subcategories of

  • symmetric biperfect (i.e. uniformity), and
  • simple symmetric biperfect (i.e. symmetric prosets)

syntopogenous spaces are also both coreflective in STpgSTpg, with coreflections () sb(-)^{s b} and () tsb(-)^{t s b} respectively.

It is straightforward to verify the following.

  1. When applied to a (quasi)-proximity space or a (quasi)-uniform space, the coreflection () tp(-)^{t p} into topological spaces computes the underlying topology of these structures, as usually defined.

  2. When applied to a uniform space, the coreflection () ts(-)^{t s} computes its underlying proximity, as usually defined. The same is true in the non-symmetric case for quasi-uniformities and quasi-proximities.

  3. When applied to any syntopogenous space, the coreflection () tb(-)^{t b} computes the specialization order of its underlying topology (i.e. its image under () tp(-)^{t p}). In particular, this is the case for topological spaces, proximity spaces, and uniform spaces.

Generalized uniform structures

proarrowmonadRezk-complete versionpro-monadsymmetric versions
binary relationpreorderpartial orderquasiuniformitysymmetric relationequivalence relationequalityuniformity
binary function to [0,)[0,\infty)quasipseudometricquasimetricquasiprometricsymmetric binary functionpseudometricmetricprometric
topogenyquasiproximitysyntopogenysymmetric topogenyproximitysymmetric syntopogeny

References

  • Ákos Császár, Foundations of General Topology, 1963

Császár uses topogenous orders \ll. Császár also defines a syntopogenous structure to be what we have called a basis for one. As usual, this is convenient for concreteness (especially in the simple case), but has the disadvantage that distinct structures can nevertheless be isomorphic via an identity function, i.e. the forgetful functor to SetSet is not amnestic. On this page, we have followed the traditional practice for other topological structures in choosing to make this functor amnestic.

Last revised on September 22, 2022 at 18:59:01. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.