Indecomposability in inverse limits with set-valued functions (Q387213)

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Indecomposability in inverse limits with set-valued functions
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    Indecomposability in inverse limits with set-valued functions (English)
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    20 December 2013
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    Traditional inverse limits are defined by using sequences of functions; since [\textit{W. T. Mahavier}, Topology Appl. 141, No. 1--3, 225--231 (2004; Zbl 1078.54021)] extended this notion to upper semicontinuous set-valued mappings, in the last decade, inverse limits with set-valued functions have been intensively studied. One of the most important notions in continuum theory is the indecomposability. Recall that a continuum \(X\) is indecomposable provided that \(X\) can not be decomposed into the union of two of its proper subcontinua. Generalizing results by \textit{W. T. Ingram} [Topol. Proc. 36, 353--373 (2010; Zbl 1196.54056)] and \textit{S. Varagona} [Houston J. Math. 37, No. 3, 1017--1034 (2011; Zbl 1235.54012)], in the paper under review, the authors give sufficient conditions under which the inverse limit of continua with set-valued mappings is indecomposable. They also demonstrate a method of constructing upper semi-continuous mappings whose inverse limit has the full projection property.
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    generalized inverse limits
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    inverse limits
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    upper semi-continuous functions
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    indecomposability
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    full projection property
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