
In mathematics, a selection principle is a rule asserting
the possibility of obtaining mathematically significant objects by
selecting elements from given sequences of sets. The theory of selection principles
studies these principles and their relations to other mathematical properties.
Selection principles mainly describe covering properties,
measure- and category-theoretic properties, and local properties in
topological spaces, especially function spaces. Often, the
characterization of a mathematical property using a selection
principle is a nontrivial task leading to new insights on the
characterized property.
The main selection principles
In 1924,
Karl Menger
introduced the following basis property for metric spaces:
Every basis of the topology contains a sequence of sets with vanishing
diameters that covers the space. Soon thereafter,
Witold Hurewicz
Witold Hurewicz (June 29, 1904 – September 6, 1956) was a Polish mathematician.
Early life and education
Witold Hurewicz was born in Łódź, at the time one of the main Polish industrial hubs with economy focused on the textile industry. Hi ...
observed that Menger's basis property is equivalent to the
following selective property: for every sequence of open covers of the space,
one can select finitely many open sets from each cover in the sequence, such that the selected sets cover the space.
Topological spaces having this covering property are called Menger spaces.
Hurewicz's reformulation of Menger's property was the first important
topological property described by a selection principle.
Let
and
be classes of mathematical objects.
In 1996,
Marion Scheepers
Marion Scheepers is a South African-born mathematician, lecturer and researcher in the Department of Mathematics of Boise State University in Boise, Idaho since 1988. He is particularly known for his work on selection principles and on infinite t ...
introduced the following selection hypotheses,
capturing a large number of classic mathematical properties:
*
: For every sequence
of elements from the class
, there are elements
such that
.
*
: For every sequence
of elements from the class
, there are finite subsets
such that
.
In the case where the classes
and
consist of covers of some ambient space, Scheepers also introduced the following selection principle.
*
: For every sequence
of elements from the class
, none containing a finite subcover, there are finite subsets
such that
.
Later,
Boaz Tsaban identified the prevalence of the following related principle:
*
: Every member of the class
contains a member of the class
.
The notions thus defined are ''selection principles''. An instantiation of a selection principle, by considering specific classes
and
, gives a ''selection (or: selective) property''. However, these terminologies are used interchangeably in the literature.
Variations
For a set
and a family
of subsets of
, the star of
in
is the set
.
In 1999,
Ljubisa D.R. Kocinac Ljubisa Dragi Rosanda Kocinac (born in Serbia in January 1947) is a mathematician and currently a Professor Emeritus at the University of Niš, Serbia.
Biography
He completed his PhD, focused on cardinal functions, at the University of Belgrad ...
introduced the following ''star selection principles'':
*
: For every sequence
of elements from the class
, there are elements
such that
.
*
: For every sequence
of elements from the class
, there are finite subsets
such that
.
Covering properties
Covering properties form the kernel of the theory of selection principles. Selection properties that are not covering properties are often studied by using implications to and from selective covering properties of related spaces.
Let
be a
topological space
In mathematics, a topological space is, roughly speaking, a geometrical space in which closeness is defined but cannot necessarily be measured by a numeric distance. More specifically, a topological space is a set whose elements are called po ...
. An ''open cover'' of
is a family of open sets whose union is the entire space
For technical reasons, we also request that the entire space
is not a member of the cover. The class of open covers of the space
is denoted by
. (Formally,
, but usually the space
is fixed in the background.) The above-mentioned property of Menger is, thus,
. In 1942, Fritz Rothberger considered Borel's strong measure zero sets, and introduced a topological variation later called
Rothberger space (also known as ''C
space''). In the notation of selections, Rothberger's property is the property
.
An open cover
of
is point-cofinite if it has infinitely many elements, and every point
belongs to all but finitely many sets
. (This type of cover was considered by Gerlits and Nagy, in the third item of a certain list in their paper. The list was enumerated by Greek letters, and thus these covers are often called
-covers.) The class of point-cofinite open covers of
is denoted by
. A topological space is a
Hurewicz space In mathematics, a Hurewicz space is a topological space that satisfies a certain basic selection principle that generalizes σ-compactness. A Hurewicz space is a space in which for every sequence of open covers \mathcal_1, \mathcal_2, \ldots of the ...
if it satisfies
.
An open cover
of
is an
-cover if every finite subset of
is contained in some member of
. The class of
-covers of
is denoted by
. A topological space is a
γ-space if it satisfies
.
By using star selection hypotheses one obtains properties such as star-Menger (
), star-Rothberger (
) and star-Hurewicz (
).
The Scheepers Diagram
There are 36 selection properties of the form
, for
and
. Some of them are trivial (hold for all spaces, or fail for all spaces). Restricting attention to
Lindelöf space In mathematics, a Lindelöf space is a topological space in which every open cover has a countable subcover. The Lindelöf property is a weakening of the more commonly used notion of ''compactness'', which requires the existence of a ''finite'' s ...
s, the diagram below, known as the ''Scheepers Diagram'',
presents nontrivial selection properties of the above form, and every nontrivial selection property is equivalent to one in the diagram. Arrows denote implications.
Local properties
Selection principles also capture important non-covering properties.
Let
be a topological space, and
. The class of sets
in the space
that have the point
in their closure is denoted by
. The class
consists of the ''countable'' elements of the class
. The class of sequences in
that converge to
is denoted by
.
* A space
is
Fréchet–Urysohn if and only if it satisfies
for all points
.
* A space
is
strongly Fréchet–Urysohn if and only if it satisfies
for all points
.
* A space
has
countable tightness In mathematics, a topological space X is called countably generated if the topology of X is determined by the countable sets in a similar way as the topology of a sequential space (or a Fréchet space) is determined by the convergent sequences.
...
if and only if it satisfies
for all points
.
* A space
has
countable fan tightness if and only if it satisfies
for all points
.
* A space
has
countable strong fan tightness if and only if it satisfies
for all points
.
Topological games
There are close connections between selection principles and
topological game
In mathematics, a topological game is an infinite game of perfect information played between two players on a topological space. Players choose objects with topological properties such as points, open sets, closed sets and open coverings. Time is ...
s.
The Menger game
Let
be a topological space. The Menger game
played on
is a game for two players, Alice and Bob. It has an inning per each natural number
. At the
inning, Alice chooses an open cover
of
,
and Bob chooses a finite subset
of
.
If the family
is a cover of the space
, then Bob wins the game. Otherwise, Alice wins.
A strategy for a player is a function determining the move of the player, given the earlier moves of both players. A strategy for a player is a winning strategy if each play where this player sticks to this strategy is won by this player.
* A topological space is
if and only if Alice has no winning strategy in the game
played on this space.
* Let
be a metric space. Bob has a winning strategy in the game
played on the space
if and only if the space
is
-compact.
Note that among Lindelöf spaces, metrizable is equivalent to regular and second-countable, and so the previous result may alternatively be obtained by considering limited information strategies. A Markov strategy is one that only uses the most recent move of the opponent and the current round number.
* Let
be a regular space. Bob has a winning Markov strategy in the game
played on the space
if and only if the space
is
-compact.
* Let
be a second-countable space. Bob has a winning Markov strategy in the game
played on the space
if and only if he has a winning perfect-information strategy.
In a similar way, we define games for other selection principles from the given Scheepers Diagram. In all these cases a topological space has a property from the Scheepers Diagram if and only if Alice has no winning strategy in the corresponding game.
But this does not hold in general; Francis Jordan demonstrated a space where Alice has a winning strategy for
, but the selection principle
fails.
Examples and properties
* Every
space is a
Lindelöf space In mathematics, a Lindelöf space is a topological space in which every open cover has a countable subcover. The Lindelöf property is a weakening of the more commonly used notion of ''compactness'', which requires the existence of a ''finite'' s ...
.
* Every
σ-compact space (a countable union of compact spaces) is
.
*
.
*
.
* Assuming the
Continuum Hypothesis
In mathematics, the continuum hypothesis (abbreviated CH) is a hypothesis about the possible sizes of infinite sets. It states that
or equivalently, that
In Zermelo–Fraenkel set theory with the axiom of choice (ZFC), this is equivalent ...
, there are sets of real numbers witnessing that the above implications cannot be reversed.
* Every
Luzin set is
but no
.
* Every
Sierpiński set is Hurewicz.
Subsets of the real line
(with the induced
subspace topology
In topology and related areas of mathematics, a subspace of a topological space ''X'' is a subset ''S'' of ''X'' which is equipped with a topology induced from that of ''X'' called the subspace topology (or the relative topology, or the induced t ...
) holding selection principle properties, most notably Menger and Hurewicz spaces, can be characterized by their continuous images in the
Baire space
In mathematics, a topological space X is said to be a Baire space if countable unions of closed sets with empty interior also have empty interior.
According to the Baire category theorem, compact Hausdorff spaces and complete metric spaces are ...
. For functions
, write
if
for all but finitely many natural numbers
. Let
be a subset of
. The set
is bounded if there is a function
such that
for all functions
. The set
is dominating if for each function
there is a function
such that
.
* A subset of the real line is
if and only if every continuous image of that space into the Baire space is not dominating.
* A subset of the real line is
if and only if every continuous image of that space into the Baire space is bounded.
Connections with other fields
General topology
* Every
space is a
D-space
In mathematics, a topological space X is a D-space if for any family \ of open sets such that x\in U_x for all points x\in X, there is a closed discrete subset D of the space X such that \bigcup_U_x=X.
History
The notion of D-spaces was introd ...
.
Let P be a property of spaces. A space
is productively P if, for each space
with property P, the product space
has property P.
* Every
separable productively
paracompact
In mathematics, a paracompact space is a topological space in which every open cover has an open refinement that is locally finite. These spaces were introduced by . Every compact space is paracompact. Every paracompact Hausdorff space is norm ...
space is
.
* Assuming the
Continuum Hypothesis
In mathematics, the continuum hypothesis (abbreviated CH) is a hypothesis about the possible sizes of infinite sets. It states that
or equivalently, that
In Zermelo–Fraenkel set theory with the axiom of choice (ZFC), this is equivalent ...
, every productively Lindelöf space is productively
* Let
be a
subset of the real line, and
be a
meager subset of the real line. Then the set
is meager.
Measure theory
* Every
subset of the real line is a
strong measure zero set.
Function spaces
Let
be a
Tychonoff space, and
be the space of continuous functions
with
pointwise convergence
In mathematics, pointwise convergence is one of various senses in which a sequence of functions can converge to a particular function. It is weaker than uniform convergence, to which it is often compared.
Definition
Suppose that X is a set and ...
topology.
*
satisfies
if and only if
is
Fréchet–Urysohn if and only if
is
strong Fréchet–Urysohn.
*
satisfies
if and only if
has
countable strong fan tightness.
*
satisfies
if and only if
has
countable fan tightness.
See also
*
Compact space
In mathematics, specifically general topology, compactness is a property that seeks to generalize the notion of a closed and bounded subset of Euclidean space by making precise the idea of a space having no "punctures" or "missing endpoints", i ...
*
Sigma-compact
*
Menger space
In mathematics, a Menger space is a topological space that satisfies a certain basic selection principle that generalizes σ-compactness. A Menger space is a space in which for every sequence of open covers \mathcal_1, \mathcal_2, \ldots of the s ...
*
Hurewicz space In mathematics, a Hurewicz space is a topological space that satisfies a certain basic selection principle that generalizes σ-compactness. A Hurewicz space is a space in which for every sequence of open covers \mathcal_1, \mathcal_2, \ldots of the ...
*
Rothberger space
References
{{Topology
Properties of topological spaces
Topology