A continuous simple closed curve, or Jordan curve, in a topological space (or convergence space, locale, etc) is the image of a continuous injection to from the unit circle . (This map itself is a continuous parametrization? of the curve.)
The word ‘continuous’ is generally assumed, so that one speaks simply of a simple closed curve. (If ‘closed’ is removed, then the domain is taken to be the unit interval instead of . If ‘simple’ is removed, then the map is no longer assumed injective. If the image alone is not sufficient data, then the word ‘parametrized’ may be added to indicate the map itself while thinking of the map as its image.)
Similarly, a Jordan surface in is the image of a continuous injection to from the unit sphere . This can be generalized to higher-dimensional spheres or other domains, so long as there is an appropriate term to use in place of ‘curve’ and ‘surface’. In particular, if has dimension (in some understood sense), then a Jordan hypersurface in is the image of a continuous injection to from .
In cohesive homotopy type theory, let the continuum line object be a commutative ring such that the shape of is contractible .
A Jordan curve is a type whose shape is equivalent to the circle type: . Similarly, a Jordan surface is a type whose shape is equivalent to the sphere type , and a -dimensional Jordan hypersurface is a type whose shape is equivalent to the -sphere type .
Commonly seen examples include in Euclidean geometry where is the Dedekind real numbers , and algebraic geometry where is the affine line .
Cauchy integral formula (about Jordan curves in the complex plane )
Jordan curve theorem (about Jordan curves in the Cartesian plane )
Jordan–Brouwer separation theorem (about Jordan hypersurfaces in any Cartesian space )
Last revised on December 14, 2022 at 02:24:46. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.