Connected space explained
In topology and related branches of mathematics, a connected space is a topological space that cannot be represented as the union of two or more disjoint non-empty open subsets. Connectedness is one of the principal topological properties that are used to distinguish topological spaces.
A subset of a topological space
is a
if it is a connected space when viewed as a
subspace of
.
Some related but stronger conditions are path connected, simply connected, and
-connected. Another related notion is locally connected, which neither implies nor follows from connectedness.
Formal definition
is said to be
if it is the union of two disjoint non-empty open sets. Otherwise,
is said to be
connected. A
subset of a topological space is said to be connected if it is connected under its subspace topology. Some authors exclude the
empty set (with its unique topology) as a connected space, but this article does not follow that practice.
For a topological space
the following conditions are equivalent:
is connected, that is, it cannot be divided into two disjoint non-empty open sets.
- The only subsets of
which are both open and closed (
clopen sets) are
and the empty set.
- The only subsets of
with empty
boundary are
and the empty set.
cannot be written as the union of two non-empty
separated sets (sets for which each is disjoint from the other's closure).
- All continuous functions from
to
are constant, where
is the two-point space endowed with the
discrete topology.
Historically this modern formulation of the notion of connectedness (in terms of no partition of
into two separated sets) first appeared (independently) with N.J. Lennes,
Frigyes Riesz, and
Felix Hausdorff at the beginning of the 20th century. See
[1] for details.
Connected components
Given some point
in a topological space
the union of any collection of connected subsets such that each contained
will once again be a connected subset. The
connected component of a point
in
is the union of all connected subsets of
that contain
it is the unique largest (with respect to
) connected subset of
that contains
The
maximal connected subsets (ordered by
inclusion
) of a non-empty topological space are called the
connected components of the space.The components of any topological space
form a
partition of
: they are
disjoint, non-empty and their union is the whole space.Every component is a
closed subset of the original space. It follows that, in the case where their number is finite, each component is also an open subset. However, if their number is infinite, this might not be the case; for instance, the connected components of the set of the
rational numbers are the one-point sets (
singletons), which are not open. Proof: Any two distinct rational numbers
are in different components. Take an irrational number
and then set
and
Then
is a separation of
and
. Thus each component is a one-point set.
Let
be the connected component of
in a topological space
and
be the intersection of all
clopen sets containing
(called
quasi-component of
) Then
where the equality holds if
is compact Hausdorff or locally connected.
[2] Disconnected spaces
A space in which all components are one-point sets is called . Related to this property, a space
is called
if, for any two distinct elements
and
of
, there exist disjoint
open sets
containing
and
containing
such that
is the union of
and
. Clearly, any totally separated space is totally disconnected, but the converse does not hold. For example take two copies of the rational numbers
, and identify them at every point except zero. The resulting space, with the
quotient topology, is totally disconnected. However, by considering the two copies of zero, one sees that the space is not totally separated. In fact, it is not even
Hausdorff, and the condition of being totally separated is strictly stronger than the condition of being Hausdorff.
Examples
in the
standard subspace topology is connected; although it can, for example, be written as the union of
and
the second set is not open in the chosen topology of
and
is disconnected; both of these intervals are open in the standard topological space
is disconnected.
is connected; it is actually
simply connected.
is connected, but is not simply connected. The three-dimensional Euclidean space without the origin is connected, and even simply connected. In contrast, the one-dimensional Euclidean space without the origin is not connected.
- A Euclidean plane with a straight line removed is not connected since it consists of two half-planes.
, the space of
real numbers with the usual topology, is connected.
, the remainder is disconnected. However, if even a countable infinity of points are removed from
, where
the remainder is connected. If
, then
remains simply connected after removal of countably many points.
or
), is simply connected.
is
homotopy equivalent to a connected space, then
is itself connected.
- The topologist's sine curve is an example of a set that is connected but is neither path connected nor locally connected.
(that is, the group of
-by-
real, invertible matrices) consists of two connected components: the one with matrices of positive determinant and the other of negative determinant. In particular, it is not connected. In contrast,
\operatorname{GL}(n,\Complex)
is connected. More generally, the set of invertible bounded operators on a complex Hilbert space is connected.
- The spectra of commutative local ring and integral domains are connected. More generally, the following are equivalent[5]
- The spectrum of a commutative ring
is connected
has constant rank.
has no
idempotent
(i.e.,
is not a product of two rings in a nontrivial way).
An example of a space that is not connected is a plane with an infinite line deleted from it. Other examples of disconnected spaces (that is, spaces which are not connected) include the plane with an annulus removed, as well as the union of two disjoint closed disks, where all examples of this paragraph bear the subspace topology induced by two-dimensional Euclidean space.
Path connectedness
A is a stronger notion of connectedness, requiring the structure of a path. A path from a point
to a point
in a
topological space
is a continuous function
from the
unit interval
to
with
and
. A
of
is an
equivalence class of
under the
equivalence relation which makes
equivalent to
if there is a path from
to
. The space
is said to be
path-connected (or
pathwise connected or
-connected) if there is exactly one path-component. For non-empty spaces, this is equivalent to the statement that there is a path joining any two points in
. Again, many authors exclude the empty space.
and the
topologist's sine curve.
are connected
if and only if they are path-connected; these subsets are the
intervals and rays of
.Also, open subsets of
or
are connected if and only if they are path-connected.Additionally, connectedness and path-connectedness are the same for
finite topological spaces.
Arc connectedness
A space
is said to be
arc-connected or
arcwise connected if any two
topologically distinguishable points can be joined by an
arc, which is an embedding
. An
arc-component of
is a maximal arc-connected subset of
; or equivalently an equivalence class of the equivalence relation of whether two points can be joined by an arc or by a path whose points are topologically indistinguishable.
Every Hausdorff space that is path-connected is also arc-connected; more generally this is true for a
-Hausdorff space, which is a space where each image of a path is closed. An example of a space which is path-connected but not arc-connected is given by the line with two origins; its two copies of
can be connected by a path but not by an arc.
Intuition for path-connected spaces does not readily transfer to arc-connected spaces. Let
be the line with two origins. The following are facts whose analogues hold for path-connected spaces, but do not hold for arc-connected spaces:
- Continuous image of arc-connected space may not be arc-connected: for example, a quotient map from an arc-connected space to its quotient with countably many (at least 2) topologically distinguishable points cannot be arc-connected due to too small cardinality.
- Arc-components may not be disjoint. For example,
has two overlapping arc-components.
- Arc-connected product space may not be a product of arc-connected spaces. For example,
is arc-connected, but
is not.
- Arc-components of a product space may not be products of arc-components of the marginal spaces. For example,
has a single arc-component, but
has two arc-components.
- If arc-connected subsets have a non-empty intersection, then their union may not be arc-connected. For example, the arc-components of
intersect, but their union is not arc-connected.
Local connectedness
See main article: Locally connected space.
A topological space is said to be locally connected at a point
if every neighbourhood of
contains a connected open neighbourhood. It is
locally connected if it has a
base of connected sets. It can be shown that a space
is locally connected if and only if every component of every open set of
is open.
Similarly, a topological space is said to be if it has a base of path-connected sets.An open subset of a locally path-connected space is connected if and only if it is path-connected.This generalizes the earlier statement about
and
, each of which is locally path-connected. More generally, any
topological manifold is locally path-connected.Locally connected does not imply connected, nor does locally path-connected imply path connected. A simple example of a locally connected (and locally path-connected) space that is not connected (or path-connected) is the union of two
separated intervals in
, such as
.
A classical example of a connected space that is not locally connected is the so called topologist's sine curve, defined as
T=\{(0,0)\}\cup\left\{\left(x,\sin\left(\tfrac{1}{x}\right)\right):x\in(0,1]\right\}
, with the
Euclidean topology induced by inclusion in
.
Set operations
The intersection of connected sets is not necessarily connected.
The union of connected sets is not necessarily connected, as can be seen by considering
.
Each ellipse is a connected set, but the union is not connected, since it can be partitioned to two disjoint open sets
and
.
This means that, if the union
is disconnected, then the collection
can be partitioned to two sub-collections, such that the unions of the sub-collections are disjoint and open in
(see picture). This implies that in several cases, a union of connected sets necessarily connected. In particular:
- If the common intersection of all sets is not empty (), then obviously they cannot be partitioned to collections with disjoint unions. Hence the union of connected sets with non-empty intersection is connected.
- If the intersection of each pair of sets is not empty (
\foralli,j:Xi\capXj ≠ \emptyset
) then again they cannot be partitioned to collections with disjoint unions, so their union must be connected.
- If the sets can be ordered as a "linked chain", i.e. indexed by integer indices and
\foralli:Xi\capXi+1 ≠ \emptyset
, then again their union must be connected.
is connected, then must be connected. Otherwise, if
is a separation of then
is a separation of the quotient space (since
are disjoint and open in the quotient space).
[6] The set difference of connected sets is not necessarily connected. However, if
and their difference
is disconnected (and thus can be written as a union of two open sets
and
), then the union of
with each such component is connected (i.e.
is connected for all
).
Theorems
- Main theorem of connectedness: Let
and
be topological spaces and let
be a continuous function. If
is (path-)connected then the image
is (path-)connected. This result can be considered a generalization of the
intermediate value theorem.
- Every path-connected space is connected.
- In a locally path-connected space, every open connected set is path-connected.
- Every locally path-connected space is locally connected.
- A locally path-connected space is path-connected if and only if it is connected.
- The closure of a connected subset is connected. Furthermore, any subset between a connected subset and its closure is connected.
- The connected components are always closed (but in general not open)
- The connected components of a locally connected space are also open.
- The connected components of a space are disjoint unions of the path-connected components (which in general are neither open nor closed).
- Every quotient of a connected (resp. locally connected, path-connected, locally path-connected) space is connected (resp. locally connected, path-connected, locally path-connected).
- Every product of a family of connected (resp. path-connected) spaces is connected (resp. path-connected).
- Every open subset of a locally connected (resp. locally path-connected) space is locally connected (resp. locally path-connected).
- Every manifold is locally path-connected.
- Arc-wise connected space is path connected, but path-wise connected space may not be arc-wise connected
- Continuous image of arc-wise connected set is arc-wise connected.
Graphs
Graphs have path connected subsets, namely those subsets for which every pair of points has a path of edges joining them.But it is not always possible to find a topology on the set of points which induces the same connected sets. The 5-cycle graph (and any
-cycle with
odd) is one such example.
As a consequence, a notion of connectedness can be formulated independently of the topology on a space. To wit, there is a category of connective spaces consisting of sets with collections of connected subsets satisfying connectivity axioms; their morphisms are those functions which map connected sets to connected sets . Topological spaces and graphs are special cases of connective spaces; indeed, the finite connective spaces are precisely the finite graphs.
However, every graph can be canonically made into a topological space, by treating vertices as points and edges as copies of the unit interval (see topological graph theory#Graphs as topological spaces). Then one can show that the graph is connected (in the graph theoretical sense) if and only if it is connected as a topological space.
Stronger forms of connectedness
There are stronger forms of connectedness for topological spaces, for instance:
- If there exist no two disjoint non-empty open sets in a topological space
,
must be connected, and thus
hyperconnected spaces are also connected.
- Since a simply connected space is, by definition, also required to be path connected, any simply connected space is also connected. If the "path connectedness" requirement is dropped from the definition of simple connectivity, a simply connected space does not need to be connected.
- Yet stronger versions of connectivity include the notion of a contractible space. Every contractible space is path connected and thus also connected.
In general, any path connected space must be connected but there exist connected spaces that are not path connected. The deleted comb space furnishes such an example, as does the above-mentioned topologist's sine curve.
Further reading
- Book: Munkres, James R. . James Munkres . Topology, Second Edition . Prentice Hall . 2000 . 0-13-181629-2.
- Connective Spaces. Muscat. J. Buhagiar. D. Mem. Fac. Sci. Eng. Shimane Univ., Series B: Math. Sc.. 39. 2006. 1–13. 2010-05-17. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304053949/http://www.math.shimane-u.ac.jp/memoir/39/D.Buhagiar.pdf. 2016-03-04. dead. .
Notes and References
- Wilder . R.L. . Evolution of the Topological Concept of "Connected" . American Mathematical Monthly . 1978 . 85 . 9 . 720–726 . 10.2307/2321676. 2321676 .
- Web site: General topology - Components of the set of rational numbers.
- Book: General Topology. Stephen Willard. Dover. 1970. 191. 0-486-43479-6.
- Book: Introduction to Topology and Modern Analysis. George F. Simmons. George F. Simmons. McGraw Hill Book Company. 1968. 144. 0-89874-551-9.
- [Charles Weibel]
- Web site: Henno . Brandsma . How to prove this result involving the quotient maps and connectedness? . . February 13, 2013 .