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 Post subject: Compact Sets
PostPosted: Tue, 4 Oct 2011 00:09:26 UTC 
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Show that every compact set must be closed.

I am looking for a simple proof.

This is supposed to be Intro Analysis proof.


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 Post subject: Re: Compact Sets
PostPosted: Tue, 4 Oct 2011 00:15:06 UTC 
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glebovg wrote:
Show that every compact set must be closed.

I am looking for a simple proof.

This is supposed to be Intro Analysis proof.


Are you in a metric space?

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 Post subject: Re: Compact Sets
PostPosted: Tue, 4 Oct 2011 00:29:12 UTC 
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Unfortunately, we have not covered metric spaces, yet. I am supposed to use covers, open covers, subcovers, etc. and the fact that any compact set must be bounded.


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 Post subject: Re: Compact Sets
PostPosted: Tue, 4 Oct 2011 00:34:41 UTC 
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glebovg wrote:
Unfortunately, we have not covered metric spaces, yet. I am supposed to use covers, open covers, subcovers, etc. and the fact that any compact set must be bounded.


Well, you'll at least need that your ambient space is Hausdorff. Then let K be compact. Select a point in the complement of K and a point in K and neighborhoods around each which do not intersect. Continue to produce a cover for K, and extract a finite subcover. Then you can argue that the intersection of the finitely many complement neighborhoods does not intersect K, and so points in the complement have neighborhoods around them, hence the complement is open.

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 Post subject: Re: Compact Sets
PostPosted: Tue, 4 Oct 2011 00:35:13 UTC 
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Also, this belongs in Analysis & Topology. Topic moved.

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 Post subject: Re: Compact Sets
PostPosted: Wed, 5 Oct 2011 17:11:16 UTC 
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How would I argue that the intersection of the finitely many complement neighborhoods does not intersect K?


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 Post subject: Re: Compact Sets
PostPosted: Wed, 5 Oct 2011 17:14:23 UTC 
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glebovg wrote:
How would I argue that the intersection of the finitely many complement neighborhoods does not intersect K?


You must have a Hausdorff space for this.

Actually, your questions all seem to have to do with \mathbb{R}, so far. . . is your ambient space supposed to be \mathbb{R}? (i.e. are you assuming K\subsetq\mathbb{R}? If so, then you REALLY should have stated that at the beginning, because there is a lot of extra information in that that one could be using. If not, then you need the space to be assumed Hausdorff so you can separate points like that.

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 Post subject: Re: Compact Sets
PostPosted: Wed, 5 Oct 2011 17:34:51 UTC 
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Shadow wrote:
glebovg wrote:
How would I argue that the intersection of the finitely many complement neighborhoods does not intersect K?


You must have a Hausdorff space for this.

Actually, your questions all seem to have to do with \mathbb{R}, so far. . . is your ambient space supposed to be \mathbb{R}? (i.e. are you assuming K\subseteq\mathbb{R}? If so, then you REALLY should have stated that at the beginning, because there is a lot of extra information in that that one could be using. If not, then you need the space to be assumed Hausdorff so you can separate points like that.


Hausdorff is sufficient, but not necessary. In fact, the property "compact=>closed" lies strictly between T_1 (singletons are closed) and T_2 (Hausdorff) --- the cofinite topology on an infinite set is a T_1 space where compact does not imply closed (since every subset is compact), and cocountable topology on an uncountable set is an example of "compact=>closed" (since the only compact sets are the finite sets) which is not T_2.

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\begin{aligned}
Spin(1)&=O(1)=\mathbb{Z}/2&\quad&\text{and}\\
Spin(2)&=U(1)=SO(2)&&\text{are obvious}\\
Spin(3)&=Sp(1)=SU(2)&&\text{by }q\mapsto(\mathop{\mathrm{Im}}\mathbb{H}\ni p\mapsto qp\bar{q})\\
Spin(4)&=Sp(1)\times Sp(1)&&\text{by }(q_1,q_2)\mapsto(\mathbb{H}\ni p\mapsto q_1p\bar{q_2})\\
Spin(5)&=Sp(2)&&\text{by }\mathbb{HP}^1\cong S^4_{round}\hookrightarrow\mathbb{R}^5\\
Spin(6)&=SU(4)&&\text{by the irrep }\Lambda_+\mathbb{C}^4
\end{aligned}


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 Post subject: Re: Compact Sets
PostPosted: Wed, 5 Oct 2011 19:53:13 UTC 
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This is Intro Analysis proof. Yes, K subset R. I am trying to prove it using basic Intro Analysis techniques. I presume that theorems like this one were proven before Topology became a major area of mathematics. Does it not seem like cheating (proving Analysis theorems using techniques from Topology given that these theorems were proven without using techniques from Topology)?


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 Post subject: Re: Compact Sets
PostPosted: Wed, 5 Oct 2011 20:59:14 UTC 
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glebovg wrote:
This is Intro Analysis proof. Yes, K subset R. I am trying to prove it using basic Intro Analysis techniques. I presume that theorems like this one were proven before Topology became a major area of mathematics. Does it not seem like cheating (proving Analysis theorems using techniques from Topology given that these theorems were proven without using techniques from Topology)?


Not really, Hausdorff is just a property that spaces have, it's not really cheating. Someone proves something in like \mathbb{R} then notices that they didn't really CARE that they were inside the real numbers, all they cared about was that they were able to separate two points by open sets, and defined Hausdorff spaces to be the places where you can do that.

In other news: PLEASE include ALL assumptions in the future, this could have been vastly simplified if we had known that K\subseteq\mathbb{R} from the start rather than just an abstract compact set in some ambient space.

My post which starts with "Well, you'll at least need that your ambient space is Hausdorff[. . .]" has what you need, you'll need to show that you can always separate two points in \mathbb{R} by neighborhoods, but that is easy, just choose a\ne b\in\mathbb{R} and let \varepsilon={|a-b|\over 2} and then the \varepsilon-neighborhood of a doesn't intersect the \varepsilon neighborhood of b, then proceed with the rest of the proof that the complement is open.

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