Topological properties of spaces of continuous functions (Q1210742)

From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Topological properties of spaces of continuous functions
scientific article

    Statements

    Topological properties of spaces of continuous functions (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    5 June 1993
    0 references
    Suppose that X is a completely regular Hausdorff space and R is a topological space with a non-trivial path. The authors give a comprehensive account of the space C(X,R) of continuous mappings from X into R, especially with the set-open and uniform topologies. Each chapter includes a number of exercises and problems, of which many are results taken directly from the literature. In Chapter One the set-open topologies are presented in a fairly general setting; they include the weak topology \(C_ p(X,R)\) of pointwise convergence and the compact-open or k-topology \(C_ k(X,R)\). Some topological properties of C(X,R) are deduced from those of X and R, and a fairly general setting for the uniform topology is then presented. Chapter Two studies various natural functions such as the injection of R into C(X,R), X into \(R^{C(X,R)}\), and mappings from C(Y,R) to C(X,R) induced by mappings from X to Y, among others. As an application of the evaluation mapping from \(X\times C(X,R)\) to R, they show that C(X,Y) is homeomorphic to C(X,C(Y,R)) in the k-topology provided that \(X\times Y\) is a k-space. Direct and inverse limits are presented as exercises. Chapter Three studies uniform convergence and Ascoli's theorem in a fairly general setting. Chapter Four studies cardinal functions such as weight, density, character, tightness, as well as the way in which they relate X to C(X,R) when R is the real number system. Chapter Five presents various characterizations of complete metrizability and Baire spaces and shows, among other things, that if X is locally compact and paracompact, then \(C_ k(X,R)\) is a Baire space. These results are then applied to extensions of embeddings from a closed subset of a hemicompact metric space into an infinite dimensional Banach space, and a proof is given of Grothendieck's theorem to the effect that every countably compact subset of \(C_ p(X,R)\) is compact in case X is compact and R is metrizable. A few minor misprints were noted. The book ends with a useful set of historical notes on the results of earlier chapters. The authors have provided us with a valuable work of reference for the current literature in this field, and their book is to be highly recommended.
    0 references
    uniform topologies
    0 references
    set-open topologies
    0 references
    weak topology
    0 references
    pointwise convergence
    0 references
    compact-open or k-topology
    0 references
    evaluation mapping
    0 references
    k-space
    0 references
    Direct and inverse limits
    0 references
    Ascoli's theorem
    0 references
    cardinal functions
    0 references
    weight
    0 references
    density
    0 references
    character
    0 references
    tightness
    0 references
    complete metrizability
    0 references
    Baire spaces
    0 references
    Grothendieck's theorem
    0 references

    Identifiers

    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references