Real Analysis

Arun Ram
Department of Mathematics and Statistics
University of Melbourne
Parkville, VIC 3010 Australia
aram@unimelb.edu.au

Last update: 19 July 2014

Lecture 31

Let X=. Let E. Then E is connected if and only if E is an interval.

Proof.

To show: E is not connected if and only if E is not an interval.
To show:

(a) If E is not connected then E is not an interval.
(b) If E is not an interval then E is not connected.

(a) Assume E is not connected.
Then there exist open sets U1,U2 such that U1U2E, U1E, U2Eand (U1E) (U2E)=. Let xU1E and yU2E and suppose x<y. Let z=sup(U1E[x,y]). Then xz<y

(b) To show: If E is not an interval then E is not connected.
Assume E is not an interval.
Then there exist x,yE with x<y and zE with x<z<y.
Let U1=(-,z) and U2=(z,).
Then U1,U2 are open, U1U2E, xU1E, yU2E and (U1E)(U2E)=.
So E is not connected.

A Hausdorff space is a topological space X such that if x,yX and xy then there exists a neighbourhood Nx of x and a neighbourhood Ny of y such that NxNy=.

The notes for Lectures 29 and 30 have a slight error in the definition of not connected. The correct definition is:

Let X be a topological space.
Let EX.
The set E is not connected if there exist open sets U1 and U2 such that U1U2E, U1E, U2E,and (U1E)(U2E)=.

Notes and References

These are notes from a 2010 course on Real Analysis 620-295. This page comes from 100521Lect31.pdf and was given on 21 May 2010.

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