Metric space is a set with a metric. Symbolically, it's a pair \( (X,d) \), where \(X\) is the underlying set and \(d\) is the metric.
subspace,
product space \( (X\times Y, d_x \times d_y ) \)
Metric specifies the distance among elements within a space.
Bi-variate function \( d(x,y) \) is a metric if it satisfies:
Distance to a set: \( d(x,A) = \inf \{ d(x,y): y\in A \} \)
Diameter of a set: \( \mathrm{diam}(A) = \sup \{ d(x,y): x,y\in A \} \)
A set is bounded if its diameter is finite.
\( L^p \) metric is a group of metric induced from \( L^p \) norm, with \( p \in \mathbb{N}_{+} \).
A psudo-metric is a function satisfying all the requirements except positivity. For example, for space \( C(\mathbb{R},\mathbb{R}) \), \[ \rho_n(x,y) = \sup_{t\in [-n,n]} |x(t)-y(t)| \quad (n=1,2,3,\cdots) \] is a psudo-metric. But it can be transformed into a metric, say \[ \sigma(x,y) = \sum_{n=1}^{\infty} \frac{1}{2^n} \min {1,\rho_n(x,y) } \]
Given \( \{x_n\}, x \in (\mathcal{L}, d(\cdot,\cdot) ) \), if \( \forall \varepsilon >0, \exists N \in \mathbb{N} \), s.t. \( \forall n>N, n\in \mathbb{N}, d(x_n,x) < \varepsilon \), then we say sequence \( \{x_n\} \) converges to \( x \) (in metric space \( \mathcal{L} \) ).
A sequence may converge in one metric, but doesnot in another.
continuity, uniform continuity
local neighborhoods: open ball, closed ball, sphere
Thm: (equivalence of metric and topological definitions of continuous mapping)
open set, open mapping
A metric space is complete if every Cauchy sequence in it converges.
Thm: (equivalence of metric and topological definitions of complete space)
Baire's Thm
Contraction mapping thm
equivalent sequence
Thm: (Completion of metric space)
sequentially compact
Boltzano-Weierstras property
covering, sub-covering, open covering, compact
The covering number N(S,s)
of a metric space S
with disks at radius s
is the minimal number of such disks needed to cover the space.
This number is finite if the metric space is compact.
Compactness Thm: equivalence of sequentially compact, compact, Boltzano-Weierstras property, H-compact
Thm: continuous mapping from a compact space induces another compact space.
Thm: product space of compact spaces is compact.
Boltzano-Weierstras theorem
Thm: real continuous mapping from a compact space has maximum and minimum.
pointwise compace, equi-continuous
Thm: (Arzela-Ascoli)
In case of function spaces, compact spaces typically are similar to finite-dimensional space.