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).

15788 questions
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What effect does a metric have on the closure, boundary and interior of a subset in a metric space?

I will post the full question for context. $A=${$(x, y)∈\mathbb{R^2}:|x|≤2$ and $|y| > 1$}, $B=${$(x, y)∈\mathbb{R^2}:x≥0$} and $C=A-B$, where $A, B$ and $C$ are subsets of the plane. The question asks for diagrams of each, but I will just post a…
Mike A
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How to prove the set $S =\{ (a_1, a_2, a_3)\in \mathbb{R}^3 | \ a_1 + a_3^2\cdot\sin( a_1 +a_2) \geq a_3 \}$ is closed

Let $S = \{ (a_1, a_2, a_3)\in \mathbb{R}^3 | \ a_1 + a_3^2\cdot\sin( a_1 +a_2) \geq a_3 \}$ then, how can I, show that S is closed under Euclidean Metric.
ram
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What kind of space is described by the metric $ds^2=-\rho^2d\alpha^2+d\rho^2$

For an assignment we have to deal with this metric, but it is not really clear to me what kind of space this metric describes. In the assignment it says: Consider the two-dimensional space-time with the metric $$ds^2=-\rho^2d\alpha^2+d\rho^2$$ Any…
Soof_fie
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Sketch a unit ball $B(0, 1)$ in $\mathbb{R}^2$ with the following norm: $\|(x, y)\| =|x|+|y|$

My Question is: Sketch the unit ball $B(0, 1)$ in $\mathbb{R}^2$ equipped with the following norm: $\|(x, y)\| =|x|+|y|$ I'm semi confident in this topic but cant seem to find the right graph to sketch so any help will be appreciated.
user384716
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If in a metric space a sequence converges to both $x$ and $y$, prove $x = y$

I just started reading about metric spaces and am finding it hard to use all the definitions to come up with a proof. Would appreciate some help!
Ludwwwig
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Pointwise Convergence and Proving Non-Convergence in a Metric

I have a sequence of functions on the space of bounded functions $B(S)$, $f_n(x)= (nx+1)^{-1}\sin(nx)$ where $x$ lies in the set $S= [0,\pi]$. Here I am supposed to show that $f_n$ converges to $f$ pointwise and I know that $f=0$ since $\lim_{n\to…
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Prove there are two metrics on finite set X

Suppose X is a finite set and we know that the number elements in X is $P^{2n}$ which $P$ is prime number and $n$ is an arbitrary natural number. Prove for every function $f:X \rightarrow X$ there are two metrics $d_1 , d_2$ on X such that for…
ebad
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Closure of a subset in a metric space is what type of set?

For any subset A of a given metric space, closure of A is A) open B) closed C) neither open nor closed D) none I think that none of the above options are correct. It should be either open or closed
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Partition of a set in a metric space

Why $$ E=(E\backslash E')\cup E' $$ isn't true in general? I don't see. $\text{Thank you very much}$.
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Prove that the supremum of the distance between a point in a compact subset and any other subset does not attain the supremum.

If $K$ is a nonempty compact subset of $M$, and $A$ is any nonempty subset of $M$, I have to prove that there is a point $y$, an element of $K$ such that $\textrm{dist}(x, A) \leq \textrm{dist}(y, A)$ (where $\textrm{dist}(q, A) = \inf\{d(q, z) : z…
user43146
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Why $B= \{(x,y)|x=0,y\neq 0\} $ in $(\mathbb R^2,d_2)$ is not open and closed

Can someone explain to me why the the subset $B= \{(x,y)|x=0,y\neq 0\} $ in $(\mathbb R^2,d_2)$, is EDIT: not closed? I understand why it's not open. If someone could explain it simply to me that would be great!
user377174
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Prove 1 is an adherent and accummulation point for $A=\{1+ \frac{1}{n}$ : n$\in$ $\mathbb N$\}

Let $A=\{1+ \frac{1}{n}$ : n$\in$ $\mathbb N$}. Is $1$ an adherent point, an accummulation point or both for this set? I think that $1$ is an adherent point because $B(1, r) \cap A \neq \emptyset$ for all $r>0$. But what about an accummulation…
TanEma
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Subset Relations of Set Closures

Let $(X,d)$ be a metric space. Let $I$ be an infinite set such that for all $i\in I$ let $A_i\subset X$. Show that $$\cup_{i\in I}\bar A_i\subsetneq \overline{\cup_{i\in I} A_i}$$ where the bar denotes closure. Earlier we showed for just two sets…
Yoni
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Is this metric space complete, $d(x,y) = \sum_{n=1}^{N} [(x_n + y_n) \text{mod} 2]$?

Let $X=\{0,1\}^{N}$ and define for $x = (x_1, \dots x_N), \ y = (y_1, \dots, y_N)$ $$ d(x,y) = \sum_{n=1}^{N} [(x_n + y_n) \text{mod} 2] $$ Is this space complete? My intuition says no. So I tried to come up with a counter example. If we have $N=1$…
Olba12
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Show that a subspace is complete

Consider $\mathbb{R}$ with it's usual Euclidean metric. Show that the subspace $[a,b]$ is complete, with $a
davkav9
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