Questions tagged [metric-spaces]

Metric spaces are sets on which a metric is defined. A metric is a generalization of the concept of "distance" in the Euclidean sense. Metric spaces arise as a special case of the more general notion of a topological space. For questions about Riemannian metrics use the tag (riemannian-geometry) instead.

A function $d: M\times M\to \mathbb R$ is called a metric if for all $x,y,z \in M$ we have

  1. $d(x,y)=0\iff x=y$
  2. $d(x,y)\geq 0$
  3. $d(x,y)=d(y,x)$
  4. $d(x,y)+d(y,z)\geq d(x,z)$.

It is a generalisation of "distance". A metric space is now defined as an ordered pair $(M,d)$, where $M$ is a set and $d:M\times M\to R$ is a metric.

An $\varepsilon$-neighbourhood of $x$ is defined as the set $$B_\epsilon(x):=\{y\in M\mid d(x,y)<\varepsilon\}.$$ $B_\varepsilon(x)$ is commonly also known as the open ball of radius $\varepsilon$ around $x$. All open balls form a base for a topology on $M$. Although all metric spaces are topological spaces, the converse is generally not true.

Some different types of metric space include

  1. Complete metric spaces (every Cauchy sequence converges)

  2. Bounded metric spaces (every metric is bounded by a finite value)

  3. Compact metric spaces (every sequence has a convergent subsequence)

  4. Locally compact metric spaces (every point has a compact neighbourhood)

  5. Separable metric spaces (it possesses a countable dense subset).

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every isometry is a homeomorphism

We defined an isometry to be a bijection $f:X\rightarrow X'$ such that $d'(f(x_1),f(x_2))=d(x_1,x_2)$ $\forall x_1,x_2\in X$. Show that any isometry is a homeomorphism. So my definition of homeomorphism is that a function $f:X\rightarrow X'$ is a…
Emir
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Homeomorphism of Unit Sphere and Unit Cube

Are the unit sphere and the unit cube in the n-dimensional Euclidean space homeomorphic? If so, can anyone give an explicit formula for the homeomorphism?
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is $GL(n,\mathbb R)$ dense in $M(n,\mathbb R)$

Is $GL(n,\mathbb R)$ dense in $M(n,\mathbb R)$? I have proved it to be open,not closed,not connected but not sure about this property .How to do this?
Learnmore
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Some equivalent formulations of compactness of a metric space

Let $(X, d)$ be a metric space. I have to prove the following statements are equivalent. $(X,d)$ is complete (i.e., every Cauchy sequence is convergent) and totally bounded (i.e., for every $\epsilon>0$, $(X,d)$ has a finite…
Sayantan
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Isometry in compact metric space

Let $(M,d)$ be a compact metric space and $f: M \rightarrow M$ a continuous function. I'm trying to prove that if $d(f(x),f(y)) \geq d(x,y)$ for every $x,y \in M$, then $f$ is an isometry. This is how far I could get: Since $f$ is a continuous…
Rick
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Can the intersection of open or closed balls be empty, if their radii are bounded from below?

I am wondering about the following question: Given a (countable) sequence of nested open balls: $$ B_1 \supseteq B_2 \supseteq \cdots $$ Not necessarily having the same same center. All having radius bounded from below, say by $r > 0$. Then can we…
Deven Ware
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In a metric space, closure is closed

In a metric space $(M,d)$, if $A$ is a subset of $M$, then $\bar A$ (closure of $A$) is closed. My definition of $\bar A$ is $\{x\in M : \forall \varepsilon > 0, \; B(x,\varepsilon) \cap A \neq \emptyset\}$, where $B(x,\varepsilon)$ is the open…
V. Galerkin
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To understand some terminology of metric spaces

In the course of my study of metric spaces I've come across some terminology which I can't seem to understand completely. So, assuming $X=\mathbb{R}$, and $\mathbb{Q}\subset X$ is the set of the rational numbers, what exactly…
Arthur
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Continuity over a compact subset of a metric space implies continuity everywhere

Let $f: (X, d_X) \rightarrow (Y, d_Y)$ be a function from metric spaces. If $f$ restricted to any compact subset of $X$ is continuous, then $f$ must be continuous everywhere. Should I proceed with the characterization of continuity that the preimage…
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Question about a metric on $\mathbb{R}^2$

Can anyone please tell me whether the following function $d:\mathbb{R}^2 \times \mathbb{R}^2 \to \mathbb{R}$ is really a metric or not on $\mathbb{R}^2$. $$ d((x_1,x_2),(y_1,y_2))= \begin{cases} |x_1-y_1|, &\text{ if }…
Sayantan
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Non-completeness of $p$-adic metric on $\mathbb{Z}$

On $\mathbb{Z}$, we define the $p$-adic metric $d_p$ (for $p$ prime) as follows, for $m,n \in \mathbb Z$: If $m=n$ then $d_p(m,n) =0$ If $m \neq n$ then $d_p(m,n) = \tfrac{1}{r+1}$ where $p^r \mid (m-n)$ but $p^{r+1} \not \mid(m-n)$ It's fairly…
Andrew D
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counterexample for the fixed point theorem

give an example of a complete metric space $(X,d)$ and a mapping $T: X \rightarrow X$ which does not have a fixed point in X and satisfies; $$ d(T(x),T(y)) < d(x,y)$$ $\forall x,y \in X, x\neq y$ i thought first that this was impossible by the fixed…
pad
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Isometry of two metric spaces

How to prove that $(\Bbb R^2, d_1)$ and $(\Bbb R^2, d_\infty)$ are isometric? My approach Let $f:(\Bbb R^2, d_1)\to(\Bbb R^2, d_\infty)$ be a function defined by $f(x, y) = (x+y,x-y)$. I can easily prove that $f$ is bijective, but I can not prove…
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Difference between limit point and limit

What is the difference between limit point of a sequence and limit of a sequence. Can it be unique?
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a non separable metric space

Let $X$ be a metric space with discrete metric whose points are the positive integers. We have to show $C(X,\mathbb{R})$ is non separable. Well, what I have to do is to show $C(X,\mathbb{R})$ has no countable dense subset. I have no idea how to…
Myshkin
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