Cut point
In topology, a cut-point is a point of a connected space such that its removal causes the resulting space to be disconnected. If removal of a point doesn't result in disconnected spaces, this point is called a non-cut point.
For example, every point of a line is a cut-point, while no point of a circle is a cut-point.
Cut-points are useful to determine whether two connected spaces are homeomorphic by counting the number of cut-points in each space. If two spaces have different number of cut-points, they are not homeomorphic. A classic example is using cut-points to show that lines and circles are not homeomorphic.
Cut-points are also useful in the characterization of topological continua, a class of spaces which combine the properties of compactness and connectedness and include many familiar spaces such as the unit interval, the circle, and the torus.
Definition
[edit]Formal definitions
[edit]A point of a connected topological space is called a cut point[1][2] of if is not connected. A point of a connected space is called a non-cut point[1] of if is connected.
Note that these two notions only make sense if the space is connected to start with. Also, for a space to have a cut point, the space must have at least three points, because removing a point from a space with one or two elements always leaves a connected space.
A non-empty connected topological space X is called a cut-point space[2] if every point in X is a cut point of X.
Basic examples
[edit]- A closed interval [a,b] has infinitely many cut points. All points except for its endpoints are cut points and the endpoints {a,b} are non-cut points.
- An open interval (a,b) has infinitely many cut points, like closed intervals. Since open intervals don't have endpoints, it has no non-cut point.
- A circle has no cut point. Every point of a circle is a non-cut point.
Notations
[edit]- A cutting of X is a set {p,U,V} where p is a cut-point of X, U and V form a separation of X-{p}.
- Also can be written as X\{p}=U|V.
Theorems
[edit]Cut-points and homeomorphisms
[edit]- Cut-points are not necessarily preserved under continuous functions. For example: f: [0, 2π] → R2, given by f(x) = (cos x, sin x). Every point of the interval (except the two endpoints) is a cut-point, but f(x) forms a circle which has no cut-points.
- Cut-points are preserved under homeomorphisms. Therefore, cut-point is a topological invariant.
Cut-points and continua
[edit]- Every continuum (compact connected Hausdorff space) with more than one point, has at least two non-cut points. Specifically, each open set which forms a separation of resulting space contains at least one non-cut point.
- Every continuum with exactly two noncut-points is homeomorphic to the unit interval.
- If K is a continuum with points a,b and K-{a,b} isn't connected, K is homeomorphic to the unit circle.
Topological properties of cut-point spaces
[edit]- Let X be a connected space and x be a cut point in X such that X\{x}=A|B. Then {x} is either open or closed. if {x} is open, A and B are closed. If {x} is closed, A and B are open.
- Let X be a cut-point space. The set of closed points of X is infinite.
Irreducible cut-point spaces
[edit]Definitions
[edit]A cut-point space is irreducible if no proper subset of it is a cut-point space.
The Khalimsky line: Let be the set of the integers and where is a basis for a topology on . The Khalimsky line is the set endowed with this topology. It's a cut-point space. Moreover, it's irreducible.
Theorem
[edit]- A topological space is an irreducible cut-point space if and only if X is homeomorphic to the Khalimsky line.
See also
[edit]Cut point (graph theory)
Notes
[edit]- ^ a b Willard 2004, Definition 28.5.
- ^ a b Honari & Bahrampour 1999, Definition 2.1.
References
[edit]- Hatcher, Allen, Notes on introductory point-set topology, pp. 20–21
- Honari, B.; Bahrampour, Y. (1999). "Cut-point spaces" (PDF). Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society. 127 (9): 2797–2803. doi:10.1090/s0002-9939-99-04839-x.
- Willard, Stephen (2004) [1970]. General Topology. Mineola, N.Y.: Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0-486-43479-7. OCLC 115240.