In topology and related areas of mathematics, a product space is the Cartesian product of a family of topological spaces equipped with a natural topology called the product topology. This topology differs from another, perhaps more natural-seeming, topology called the box topology, which can also be given to a product space and which agrees with the product topology when the product is over only finitely many spaces. However, the product topology is "correct" in that it makes the product space a categorical product of its factors, whereas the box topology is too fine; in that sense the product topology is the natural topology on the Cartesian product.
Throughout,
I
i\inI,
Xi
Xi
and for every index
i\inI,
i
The , sometimes called the , on is defined to be the coarsest topology (that is, the topology with the fewest open sets) for which all the projections are continuous. The Cartesian product endowed with the product topology is called the .The open sets in the product topology are arbitrary unions (finite or infinite) of sets of the form where each
Ui
Xi
Ui ≠ Xi
i.
Xi
Ui
Xi,
The product topology on is the topology generated by sets of the form
-1 | |
p | |
i |
\left(Ui\right),
i\inI
Ui
Xi.
form a subbase for the topology on
X.
X
-1 | |
p | |
i |
\left(Ui\right).
-1 | |
p | |
i |
\left(Ui\right)
The product topology is also called the because a sequence (or more generally, a net) in converges if and only if all its projections to the spaces
Xi
pi\left(s\bull\right)\topi(x)
Xi
i\inI,
pi\left(s\bull\right):=pi\circs\bull
\left(pi\left(sn\right)\right)
infty | |
n=1 |
\left(pi\left(sa\right)\right)a
Xi=\R
i
I,
\R
n
\R
\Rn.
n
\Rn.
\{0,1\}
Several additional examples are given in the article on the initial topology.
The set of Cartesian products between the open sets of the topologies of each
Xi
X.
The product space
X,
Y
i\inI,
fi:Y\toXi
f:Y\toX
i\inI
This shows that the product space is a product in the category of topological spaces. It follows from the above universal property that a map
f:Y\toX
fi=pi\circf
i\inI.
fi
X\toY
pi
In addition to being continuous, the canonical projections
pi:X\toXi
Xi.
W
Xi
W
X
\R\setminus\{0\}
Suppose is a product of arbitrary subsets, where
Si\subseteqXi
i\inI.
Si
X
Si
Xi.
X
Any product of Hausdorff spaces is again a Hausdorff space.
Tychonoff's theorem, which is equivalent to the axiom of choice, states that any product of compact spaces is a compact space. A specialization of Tychonoff's theorem that requires only the ultrafilter lemma (and not the full strength of the axiom of choice) states that any product of compact Hausdorff spaces is a compact space.
If is fixed then the set
is a dense subset of the product space
X
Separation
Compactness
Connectedness
Metric spaces
One of many ways to express the axiom of choice is to say that it is equivalent to the statement that the Cartesian product of a collection of non-empty sets is non-empty. The proof that this is equivalent to the statement of the axiom in terms of choice functions is immediate: one needs only to pick an element from each set to find a representative in the product. Conversely, a representative of the product is a set which contains exactly one element from each component.
The axiom of choice occurs again in the study of (topological) product spaces; for example, Tychonoff's theorem on compact sets is a more complex and subtle example of a statement that requires the axiom of choice and is equivalent to it in its most general formulation, and shows why the product topology may be considered the more useful topology to put on a Cartesian product.