English
Adjective
- of or relating to topology
Translations
of or relating to topology
- Croatian: topološki
- Czech: topologický
- German: topologisch
- Swedish: topologisk
Topology (
Greek
topos, "place," and logos, "study") is a branch of
mathematics that is an
extension of
geometry.
Topology begins with a consideration of the nature of space,
investigating both its fine structure and its global structure.
Topology builds on
set theory,
considering both sets of points and families of sets.
The word topology is used both for the area of
study and for a family of sets with certain properties described
below that are used to define a
topological
space. Of particular importance in the study of topology are
functions
or maps that are
homeomorphisms.
Informally, these functions can be thought of as those that stretch
space without tearing it apart or sticking distinct parts
together.
When the discipline was first properly founded,
toward the end of the
19th
century, it was called geometria situs (
Latin geometry of
place) and analysis situs (
Latin analysis of
place). From around 1925 to 1975 it was an important growth area
within mathematics.
Topology is a large branch of mathematics that
includes many subfields. The most basic division within topology is
point-set
topology, which investigates such concepts as
compactness,
connectedness,
and
countability;
algebraic
topology, which investigates such concepts as
homotopy and
homology;
and
geometric
topology, which studies
manifolds and
their embeddings, including
knot
theory.
See also:
topology
glossary for definitions of some of the terms used in topology
and
topological
space for a more technical treatment of the subject.
History
The branch of mathematics now called topology
began with the investigation of certain questions in geometry.
Leonhard
Euler's
1736 paper on
Seven Bridges of Königsberg is regarded as one of the first
topological results.
The term "Topologie" was introduced in German in
1847 by
Johann
Benedict Listing in Vorstudien zur Topologie, Vandenhoeck und
Ruprecht, Göttingen, pp. 67, 1848. However, Listing had already
used the word for ten years in correspondence. "Topology", its
English form, was introduced in 1883 in the journal
Nature
to distinguish "qualitative geometry from the ordinary geometry in
which quantitative relations chiefly are treated". The term
topologist in the sense of a specialist in topology was used in
1905 in the magazine
Spectator.
Modern topology depends strongly on the ideas of
set
theory, developed by
Georg Cantor
in the later part of the 19th century. Cantor, in addition to
setting down the basic ideas of set theory, considered point sets
in
Euclidean
space, as part of his study of
Fourier
series.
Henri
Poincaré published
Analysis
Situs in 1895, introducing the concepts of
homotopy and
homology,
which are now considered part of algebraic topology.
Maurice
Fréchet, unifying the work on function spaces of Cantor,
Volterra,
Arzelà,
Hadamard,
Ascoli and others, introduced the
metric space
in 1906. A metric space is now considered a special case of a
general topological space. In 1914,
Felix
Hausdorff coined the term "topological space" and gave the
definition for what is now called a
Hausdorff
space. In current usage, a topological space is a slight
generalization of Hausdorff spaces, given in 1922 by
Kazimierz
Kuratowski.
For further developments, see
point-set
topology and
algebraic
topology.
Elementary introduction
Topological spaces show up
naturally in almost every branch of mathematics. This has made
topology one of the great unifying ideas of mathematics.
General
topology, or
point-set
topology, defines and studies properties of spaces and maps
such as
connectedness,
compactness
and
continuity.
Algebraic
topology uses structures from
abstract
algebra, especially the
group
to study topological spaces and the maps between them.
The motivating insight behind topology is that
some geometric problems depend not on the exact shape of the
objects involved, but rather on the way they are put together. For
example, the square and the circle have many properties in common:
they are both one dimensional objects (from a topological point of
view) and both separate the plane into two parts, the part inside
and the part outside.
One of the first papers in topology was the
demonstration, by
Leonhard
Euler, that it was impossible to find a route through the town
of Königsberg (now
Kaliningrad)
that would cross each of its seven bridges exactly once. This
result did not depend on the lengths of the bridges, nor on their
distance from one another, but only on connectivity properties:
which bridges are connected to which islands or riverbanks. This
problem, the
Seven Bridges of Königsberg, is now a famous problem in
introductory mathematics, and led to the branch of mathematics
known as
graph
theory.
Similarly, the
hairy
ball theorem of algebraic topology says that "one cannot comb
the hair on a ball smooth." This fact is immediately convincing to
most people, even though they might not recognize the more formal
statement of the theorem, that there is no nonvanishing
continuous tangent
vector field on the
sphere. As with the
Bridges of Königsberg, the result does not depend on the exact
shape of the sphere; it applies to pear shapes and in fact any kind
of blob (subject to certain conditions on the smoothness of the
surface), as long as it has no holes.
In order to deal with these problems that do not
rely on the exact shape of the objects, one must be clear about
just what properties these problems do rely on. From this need
arises the notion of topological equivalence. The impossibility of
crossing each bridge just once applies to any arrangement of
bridges topologically equivalent to those in Königsberg, and the
hairy ball theorem applies to any space topologically equivalent to
a sphere.
Intuitively, two spaces are topologically
equivalent if one can be deformed into the other without cutting or
gluing. A traditional joke is that a topologist can't tell the
coffee
mug out of which she is drinking from the
doughnut
she is eating, since a sufficiently pliable doughnut could be
reshaped to the form of a coffee cup by creating a dimple and
progressively enlarging it, while shrinking the hole into a
handle.
A simple introductory exercise is to classify the
lowercase letters of the
English
alphabet according to topological equivalence. (The lines of
the letters are assumed to have non-zero width.) In most fonts in
modern use, there is a class of letters with one hole, a class of
letters without a hole, and a class of letters consisting of two
pieces. g may either belong in the class with one hole, or (in some
fonts) it may be the sole element of a class of letters with two
holes, depending on whether or not the tail is closed. For a more
complicated exercise, it may be assumed that the lines have zero
width; one can get several different classifications depending on
which font is used. Letter topology is of practical relevance in
stencil typography: The font
Braggadocio,
for instance, can be cut out of a plane without falling
apart.
Mathematical definition
Let X be any set and let T be a
family of subsets of X. Then T is a topology on X if
- Both the empty set and X are elements of T.
- Any union of arbitrarily many elements of T is an element of T.
- Any intersection of finitely many elements of T is an element
of T.
If T is a topology on X, then X together with T
is called a topological space.
All sets in T are called
open; note that
in general not all subsets of X need be in T. A subset of X is said
to be
closed if its
complement is in T (i.e., it is
open). A subset
of X may be open, closed,
both, or
neither.
A
function
or map from one topological space to another is called continuous
if the inverse image of any open set is open. If the function maps
the
real
numbers to the real numbers (both space with the Standard
Topology), then this definition of continuous is equivalent to the
definition of continuous in
calculus. If a continuous
function is
one-to-one
and
onto
and if the inverse of the function is also continuous, then the
function is called a
homeomorphism and the
domain of the function is said to be homeomorphic to the range.
Another way of saying this is that the function has a natural
extension to the topology. If two spaces are homeomorphic, they
have identical topological properties, and are considered to be
topologically the same. The cube and the sphere are homeomorphic,
as are the coffee cup and the doughnut. But the circle is not
homeomorphic to the doughnut.
Some theorems in general topology
General topology also has some surprising
connections to other areas of mathematics. For example:
Some useful notions from algebraic topology
See also
list of algebraic topology topics.
Generalizations
Occasionally, one needs to use the tools of
topology but a "set of points" is not available. In
pointless
topology one considers instead the
lattice
of open sets as the basic notion of the theory, while
Grothendieck
topologies are certain structures defined on arbitrary
categories
which allow the definition of
sheaves
on those categories, and with that the definition of quite general
cohomology theories.
Topology in Works of Art and Literature
References
- Querenburg,
Boto von, (2006), Mengentheoretische Topologie. Heidelberg:
Springer-Lehrbuch. ISBN 3-540-67790-9
topological in Arabic: طوبولوجيا
topological in Bulgarian: Топология
topological in Catalan: Topologia
topological in Czech: Topologie
topological in Danish: Topologi
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topological in Modern Greek (1453-):
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topological in Classical Chinese: 拓撲學
topological in Korean: 위상수학
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topological in Latvian: Topoloģija
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topological in Tamil: இடவியல்
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topological in Chinese: 拓扑学