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Erdős proved that every real number is the sum of two Liouville numbers. A set W of complex numbers is said to have the Erdős property if every real number is the sum of two members of W. Mahler divided the set of all transcendental numbers into three disjoint classes S, T and U such that, in particular, any two complex numbers which are algebraically dependent lie in the same class. The set of Liouville numbers is a proper subset of the set U and has Lebesgue measure zero. It is proved here, using a theorem of Weil on locally compact groups, that if $m\in [0,\infty )$, then there exist $2^{\mathfrak {c}}$ dense subsets W of S each of Lebesgue measure m such that W has the Erdős property and no two of these W are homeomorphic. It is also proved that there are $2^{\mathfrak {c}}$ dense subsets W of S each of full Lebesgue measure, which have the Erdős property. Finally, it is proved that there are $2^{\mathfrak {c}}$ dense subsets W of S such that every complex number is the sum of two members of W and such that no two of these W are homeomorphic.
A thin set is defined to be an uncountable dense zero-dimensional subset of measure zero and Hausdorff measure zero of an Euclidean space. A fat set is defined to be an uncountable dense path-connected subset of an Euclidean space which has full measure, that is, its complement has measure zero. While there are well-known pathological maps of a set of measure zero, such as the Cantor set, onto an interval, we show that the standard addition on
$\mathbb {R}$
maps a thin set onto a fat set; in fact the fat set is all of
$\mathbb {R}$
. Our argument depends on the theorem of Paul Erdős that every real number is a sum of two Liouville numbers. Our thin set is the set
$\mathcal {L}^{2}$
, where
$\mathcal {L}$
is the set of all Liouville numbers, and the fat set is
$\mathbb {R}$
itself. Finally, it is shown that
$\mathcal {L}$
and
$\mathcal {L}^{2}$
are both homeomorphic to
$\mathbb {P}$
, the space of all irrational numbers.
We study the following problem: For which Tychonoff spaces $X$ do the free topological group $F(X)$ and the free abelian topological group $A(X)$ admit a quotient homomorphism onto a separable and nontrivial (i.e., not finitely generated) group? The existence of the required quotient homomorphisms is established for several important classes of spaces $X$, which include the class of pseudocompact spaces, the class of locally compact spaces, the class of $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70E}$-compact spaces, the class of connected locally connected spaces, and some others.
We also show that there exists an infinite separable precompact topological abelian group $G$ such that every quotient of $G$ is either the one-point group or contains a dense non-separable subgroup and, hence, does not have a countable network.
Continua $X$ and $Y$ are monotone equivalent if there exist monotone onto maps $f\,:\,X\,\to \,Y$ and $g:\,Y\to \,X.\,\text{A}$. A continuum $X$ is isolated with respect to monotone maps if every continuumthat is monotone equivalent to $X$ must also be homeomorphic to $X$. In this paper we show that a dendrite $X$ is isolated with respect to monotone maps if and only if the set of ramification points of $X$ is finite. In this way we fully characterize the classes of dendrites that are monotone isolated.
We prove that, for an interval X ⊆ ℝ and a normed space Z, diagonals of separately absolutely continuous mappings f : X2 → Z are exactly mappings g : X → Z, which are the sums of absolutely convergent series of continuous functions.
We give a full description of the structure under inclusion of all finite level Borel classes of functions, and provide an elementary proof of the well-known fact that not every Borel function can be written as a countable union of Σα0-measurable functions (for every fixed 1 ≤ α < ω1). Moreover, we present some results concerning those Borel functions which are ω-decomposable into continuous functions (also called countably continuous functions in the literature): such results should be viewed as a contribution towards the goal of generalizing a remarkable theorem of Jayne and Rogers to all finite levels, and in fact they allow us to prove some restricted forms of such generalizations. We also analyze finite level Borel functions in terms of composition of simpler functions, and we finally present an application to Banach space theory.
We prove that a connected, countable dense homogeneous space is $n$-homogeneous for every n, and strongly 2-homogeneous provided it is locally connected. We also present an example of a connected and countable dense homogeneous space which is not strongly 2-homogeneous. This answers in the negative Problem 136 ofWatson in the Open Problems in Topology Book.
Recently the class of almost-N-continuous functions between topological spaces has been defined. This paper continues the study of such functions, especially from the point of view of changing the topology on the codomain.
The notion of pointwise cleavability is introduced. We clarify those results concerning cleavability which can be or can not be generalized to the case of pointwise cleavability.
The importance of compactness in this theory is shown. Among other things we prove that t, ts, πx, the property to be Fréchet-Urysohn, radiality, biradiality, bisequentiality and so on are preserved by pointwise cleavability on the class of compact Hausdorff spaces.
Peano continua which are images of the unit interval [0,1] or the circle S under a continuous and irreducible map are investigated. Necessary conditions for a space to be the irreducible image of [0,1] are given, and it is conjectured that these conditions are sufficient as well. Also, various results on irreducible images of [0,1] and S are given within some classes of regular curves. Some of them involve inverse limits of inverse sequences of Euler graphs with monotone bonding maps.
An example is given of a regular space on which every real-valued function with a closed graph is constant. It was previously known that there are regular spaces on which every continuous function is constant. It is also shown here that there are regular spaces that support only constant real-valued continuous functions, but support non-constant real-valued functions with a closed graph.
Recent work by Krystock, Porter, and Vermeer has emphasized the importance of the concepts of Katětov spaces and H-sets in the theory of H-closed spaces. These properties are closely related to being the θ-closure of some set and being the adherence of an open filter. This relationship is developed by establishing, among other facts, that an H-closed space in which every closed set is the θ-closure of some set is compact and the θ-closure of a subset of an H-closed space is Katětov and characterizing the open filter adhérences of a space as precisely those sets which are the image of a closed set of the absolute of the space. Also, examples are given of a countable, scattered space which is not Katětov and an H-closed space with an H-closed subspace which is not the θ-closure of any subset of the given space.
The paper discusses some consequences of weak monotonicity for connected maps in relation to essential connectedness of a space. The first main result gives conditions under which the image by a connected map of an essentially connected space is essentially connected. The second is that, for a connected mapping of a connected, 1 .c. space to a WLOTS-wise and essentially connected space, w-monotonicity implies monotonicity. The remainder of the paper discusses continuity properties of connected, w-monotone mappings with WLOTS-wise and essentially connected range.
In this paper it is shown that aimost local connectedness is hereditary for the subspace that is the union of regular open sets and is preserved under almost-open (in the sense of Singal) θ-continuous surjections.
A subset of a topological space is called discrete iff every point in the space has a neighborhood which meets the set in at most one point. Discrete sets are useful for decomposing the images of certain maps and for generalizing closed maps. All discrete sets are closed iff the space is T1. As a result of characterizing discrete and countably discrete maps, theorems due to Vaĭnšteĭn and Engelking are extended to these maps.
In this paper the notion of inverse cluster set, which was recently introduced and studied for functions by T. R. Hamlett and P. E. Long (Proc. Amer. Math. Soc, 53 (1975), 470-476), is extended to and investigated for multifunctions. We generalize the notion of inverse cluster set, extend to multifunctions and generalize some known results for inverse cluster sets of functions and offer some new results. In the latter sections, compactness generalizations are characterized in terms of inverse cluster sets and some results on connected and conectivity functions are extended to multifunctions.
A strong version of Levine′s decomposition of continuity leads to the result that a closed graph weakly continuous function into a rim-compact space is continuous. This result implies a closed graph theorem: every almost continuous closed graph function into a strongly locally compact space is continuous. An open problem of Shwu-Yeng T. Lin and Y.-F. Lin asks if every almost continuous closed graph function from a Baire space to a second countable space is necessarily continuous. This question is answered in the negative by an example.
It is proved, in particular, that a topological space X is a Baire space if and only if every real valued function f: X →R is almost continuous on a dense subset of X. In fact, in the above characterization of a Baire space, the range space R of real numbers may be generalized to any second countable, Hausdorfï space that contains infinitely many points.
We answer the following problem posed by Herrlich in the affirmative: “Can the Freudenthal compactification be regarded as a reflection in a sensible way?” This is accomplished by exploiting the one-to-one correspondence between proximities compatible with a given Tihonov space and compactifications of that space. We give topological characterizations of proximally continuous functions for the proximities associated with the Freudenthal and Fan-Gottesman compactifications.
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