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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example showing Minkowski distance with $p<1$ is not a metric

The Minkowski distance: $$\left(\sum_i |x_i-x_i'|^p \right)^{1/p},\ \text{where}\ p\ge1$$ is only a metric for $p\ge1$. Can someone give me a quick example why the triangle inequality doesn't hold in other cases?
Dahlai
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Isotropic Metric on $\mathbb{R}^{\mathbb{N}}$

I don't know if the term isotropic is correct in this context, but I was wondering if there exists a non trivial metric $\rho $ in $X=\mathbb{R}^{\mathbb{N}}$ such that $$\forall i \in \mathbb{N} \quad d(e^i,0) \text{ doesn't depend on }i$$ I tried…
user90803
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What can you say about interior points of a non empty subset of real numbers?

Given that A is a non-empty subset of real numbers, if I(A) denotes the set of interior points of A; then I (A) is:- a) empty. b) singleton. c) a finite set containing more than one element. d) countable but not finite. I know that the largest open…
Kavita
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Prove that two closed and disjoint sets, have open disjoint super-sets with dist metric .

For starters let's define the distance between a point $x$ and a set $A\subseteq X$ of a metric space $(X,d)$ as follows: $$\text{dist}(x,A)=\inf\{d(x,a):a \in A\}.$$ Now let's assume that $A,B$ are two closed non-empty subsets of $X$ and…
Stef M
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Closure operation is not necessarily preserved

If $(X,d)$ and $(Y,d')$ are metric spaces and if $f:X\rightarrow Y$, show that $f$ is continuous if and only if for every $A\subset X$, $f(\overline{A})\subset\overline{f(A)}$, and construct an example to show that the closure operation is not…
user298133
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Disjoint closed sets in a metric space

Give an example of a metric space $(X,d)$ and two closed sets $A,B$ with $A\cap B=\varnothing$ and $d(A,B)=0$.
Silva
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Difference between $\mathbb{R}^{4}$ and $\mathbb{R}^{1,3}$

What's the difference between $\Bbb R^{4}$ and $\Bbb R^{1,3}$? I know that the first one has metric Kronecker delta $\delta_{ij}$. Does the second one have Minkowski metric $g_{\mu \nu}$?
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Find an example of a metric spaces

Find an example of a metric subspace $ X$ of $\Bbb R$ in which : Every open set in $X$ is an open set in $\Bbb R$ , but not every closed set in $X$ is a closed set in $\Bbb R$. I thought that i can take the set of rational numbers $\Bbb Q$ but im…
math
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Singleton as a metric space

I am trying to show that I can come up with a metric such that the set $X =\{0\} $ will be a metric space. I was considering the metric $d(x,y)=0$ for all $x,y \in X$ and I showed that this function satisfies the definition of metric. So this…
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Show that the singleton set is open in a finite metric spce.

Let $(X,d)$ be a metric space such that $X$ has finitely many points. Prove that for every $x\in X$, the singleton set $\{x\}$ is open. This is what I did: every finite metric space is a discrete space and hence every singleton set is open. But I…
marya
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Show that unbounded open ball is an open set.

Show that unbounded open ball $$B=\{y:d(x,y)>r\}$$ is an open set. In the case of bounded open ball $$B=\{y:d(x,y)
marya
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Example about Hausdorff distance

As we know Hausdorff distance for two compact sets is defined like: $$d_H (A,B)=\max\{\sup_{a\in A}(a,B), \sup_{b\in B}(b,A)\}$$ And compact set sequence $C_i$ converge to $C$ iff $ \lim_{i\to\infty}d_H(C_i,C)=0$ Can anyone find $C_i \ C\subset R^2$…
Kira Yamato
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Why is this set open?

I've read that $C = \{(x,y) \mid x>0, y<0 \}$ is an open set in $\mathbb{R}^n$, but I think that I proved that it is not and I don't know what is wrong with my reasonings. If we take for instance the point $c = (1,-1)$, then for every $r>0$, the…
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Show that all norm in $\mathbb{R}$ is of the form $\vert\vert x\vert\vert=a\cdot\vert x\vert$

Show that all norm $\vert\vert .\vert\vert$ in $\mathbb{R}$ is of the form $\vert\vert x\vert\vert=a\cdot\vert x\vert$, where $a>0$ is a constant and $\vert x\vert$ is the absolute value of $x$. Is obvious that all norm in $\mathbb{R}$ is of the…
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metric spaces open set

In a metric space $(X,P)$ $$x\in X$$ and and $$\delta >0$$ are fixed Show that $B(x,\delta)$ is open set. I am not entirely sure how to do this problem. The first step I did is write down the definition $B(x,\delta)=[y\in X: P(x,y)<\delta$ But now…
Fernando Martinez
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