In mathematics, a dendroid is a type of topological space, satisfying the properties that it is hereditarily unicoherent (meaning that every subcontinuum of X is unicoherent), arcwise connected, and forms a continuum. The term dendroid was introduced by Bronisław Knaster lecturing at the University of Wrocław,[1] although these spaces were studied earlier by Karol Borsuk and others.[2] [3]
proved that dendroids have the fixed-point property: Every continuous function from a dendroid to itself has a fixed point.[2] proved that every dendroid is tree-like, meaning that it has arbitrarily fine open covers whose nerve is a tree.[4] The more general question of whether every tree-like continuum has the fixed-point property, posed by,[5] was solved in the negative by David P. Bellamy, who gave an example of a tree-like continuum without the fixed-point property.[6]
In Knaster's original publication on dendroids, in 1961, he posed the problem of characterizing the dendroids which can be embedded into the Euclidean plane. This problem remains open.[1] [7] Another problem posed in the same year by Knaster, on the existence of an uncountable collection of dendroids with the property that no dendroid in the collection has a continuous surjection onto any other dendroid in the collection, was solved by and, who gave an example of such a family.[8] [9]
A locally connected dendroid is called a dendrite. A cone over the Cantor set (called a Cantor fan) is an example of a dendroid that is not a dendrite.[10]