Metric space: Difference between revisions
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== Formal definition of metric space == | == Formal definition of metric space == | ||
A '''metric space''' is an ordered pair <math>(X,d)</math> where <math>X</math> is a set and <math>d</math> is a metric on <math>X</math>. | A '''metric space''' is an ordered pair <math>(X,d)\,</math> where <math>X\,</math> is a set and <math>d\,</math> is a metric on <math>X\,</math>. | ||
For shorthand, a metric space <math>(X,d)</math> is usually written simply as <math>X</math> once the metric <math>d</math> has been defined or is understood. | For shorthand, a metric space <math>(X,d)\,</math> is usually written simply as <math>X\,</math> once the metric <math>d\,</math> has been defined or is understood. | ||
== Metric topology == | == Metric topology == |
Revision as of 03:57, 13 November 2007
In mathematics, a metric space is, roughly speaking, an abstract mathematical structure that generalizes the notion of a Euclidean space which has been equipped with the Euclidean distance, to more general classes of sets such as a set of functions. A metric space consists of two components, a set and a metric on that set. On a metric space, the metric replaces the Euclidean distance as a notion of "distance" between any pair of elements in its associated set (for example, as an abstract distance between two functions in a set of functions) and induces a topology on the set called the metric topology.
Metric on a set
Let be an arbitrary set. A metric on is a function with the following properties:
- (non-negativity)
- (symmetry)
- (triangular inequality)
- if and only if
Formal definition of metric space
A metric space is an ordered pair where is a set and is a metric on .
For shorthand, a metric space is usually written simply as once the metric has been defined or is understood.
Metric topology
A metric on a set induces a particular topology on called the metric topology. For any , let the open ball of radius around the point be defined as . Define the collection of subsets of (meaning that ) consisting of the empty set and all sets of the form:
where is an arbitrary index set (can be uncountable) and and for all . Then the set satisfies all the requirements to be a topology on and is said to be the topology induced by the metric . Any topology induced by a metric is said to be a metric topology.
Examples
- The "canonical" example of a metric space, and indeed what motivated the general definition of such a space, is the Euclidean space endowed with the Euclidean distance defined by .
- Consider the set of all real valued continuous functions on the interval with . Define the function by . Then is a metric on and induces a topology on often known as the norm topology or uniform topology.
See also
References
1. K. Yosida, Functional Analysis (6 ed.), ser. Classics in Mathematics, Berlin, Heidelberg, New York: Springer-Verlag, 1980