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Totally disconnected space - Wikipedia

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In topology and related branches of mathematics, a totally disconnected space is a topological space that has only singletons as connected subsets. In every topological space, the singletons (and, when it is considered connected, the empty set) are connected; in a totally disconnected space, these are the only connected subsets.

An important example of a totally disconnected space is the Cantor set, which is homeomorphic to the set of p-adic integers. Another example, playing a key role in algebraic number theory, is the field Qp of p-adic numbers.

A topological space {\displaystyle X} is totally disconnected if the connected components in {\displaystyle X} are the one-point sets.[1][2] Analogously, a topological space {\displaystyle X} is totally path-disconnected if all path-components in {\displaystyle X} are the one-point sets.

Another closely related notion is that of a totally separated space, i.e. a space where quasicomponents are singletons. That is, a topological space {\displaystyle X} is totally separated if for every {\displaystyle x\in X}, the intersection of all clopen neighborhoods of {\displaystyle x} is the singleton {\displaystyle \{x\}}. Equivalently, for each pair of distinct points {\displaystyle x,y\in X}, there is a pair of disjoint open neighborhoods {\displaystyle U,V} of {\displaystyle x,y} such that {\displaystyle X=U\sqcup V}.

Every totally separated space is evidently totally disconnected but the converse is false even for metric spaces. For instance, take {\displaystyle X} to be the Cantor's teepee, which is the Knaster–Kuratowski fan with the apex removed. Then {\displaystyle X} is totally disconnected but its quasicomponents are not singletons. For locally compact Hausdorff spaces the two notions (totally disconnected and totally separated) are equivalent.

Confusingly, in the literature (for instance[3]) totally disconnected spaces are sometimes called hereditarily disconnected,[4] while the terminology totally disconnected is used for totally separated spaces.[4]

The following are examples of totally disconnected spaces:

Constructing a totally disconnected quotient space of any given space

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Let {\displaystyle X} be an arbitrary topological space. Let {\displaystyle x\sim y} if and only if {\displaystyle y\in \mathrm {conn} (x)} (where {\displaystyle \mathrm {conn} (x)} denotes the largest connected subset containing {\displaystyle x}). This is obviously an equivalence relation whose equivalence classes are the connected components of {\displaystyle X}. Endow {\displaystyle X/{\sim }} with the quotient topology, i.e. the finest topology making the map {\displaystyle m:x\mapsto \mathrm {conn} (x)} continuous. With a little bit of effort we can see that {\displaystyle X/{\sim }} is totally disconnected.

In fact this space is not only some totally disconnected quotient but in a certain sense the biggest: The following universal property holds: For any totally disconnected space {\displaystyle Y} and any continuous map {\displaystyle f:X\rightarrow Y}, there exists a unique continuous map {\displaystyle {\breve {f}}:(X/\sim )\rightarrow Y} with {\displaystyle f={\breve {f}}\circ m}.

  1. ^ Rudin 1991, p. 395 Appendix A7.
  2. ^ Munkres 2000, pp. 152.
  3. ^ Engelking, Ryszard (1989). General Topology. Heldermann Verlag, Sigma Series in Pure Mathematics. ISBN 3-88538-006-4.
  4. ^ a b Kuratowski 1968, pp. 151.