Proximate fixed point property and operations (Q260525): Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 16:27, 11 July 2024

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Proximate fixed point property and operations
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    Proximate fixed point property and operations (English)
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    21 March 2016
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    A compactuum is a compact metric space. Given a compactum \(X\) with metric \(d\), and \(\delta>0\), a continuous function \(f:X \rightarrow X\) is \(\delta\)-continuous if there exists \(\eta>0\) such that if \(d(u,x)<\eta\), then \(d(u,x)<\delta\). The compactum \(X\) has the proximate fixed point property (pfpp) if for every \(\varepsilon>0\), there exists a number \(\delta>0\) such that if \(f:X \rightarrow X\) is \(\delta\)-continuous, then there exists a point \(x \in X\) such that \(d(x,f(x))< \varepsilon\). The definition of pfpp was introduced by \textit{V. Klee} [Colloq. Math. 8, 43--46 (1961; Zbl 0101.15101)] who proved that if a compactum has the pfpp, then \(X\) has the fixed point property. The Warsaw circle is an example of a compactum with the fixed point property and without the pfpp. In the paper under review the author gives conditions under which products, cones, suspensions and joins of compacta have the pfpp. As an application, he shows that having span \(0\) is a sufficient conditon for all these spaces to have the pfpp.
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    continuum
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    fixed point property
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    join
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    proximate fixed point property
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    product
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    span zero
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