Connected space/Proofs

Connected space/Proofs

Every path-connected space is connected

Let "S" be path-connected and suppose, for contradiction, that "S" is not connected. Then S = A cup B for nonempty disjoint open sets "A" and "B". Let x in A, y in B. Since "S" is path-connected, there exists a continuous path gamma: [0, 1] o S with gamma(0) = x and gamma(1) = y.

Since "f" is continuous, ilde{A} = f^{-1}(A) and ilde{B} = f^{-1}(B) are open subsets of [0, 1] . Moreover ilde{A} and ilde{B} are nonempty since they contain 0 and 1, respectively. They are disjoint since "A" and "B" are disjoint, and ilde{A} cup ilde{B} = [0, 1] , so [0, 1] is not connected, a contradiction.

Therefore "S" is connected.

A locally path-connected space is path-connected if and only if it is connected

A path-connected space is always connected. We therefore focus on the converse.

Let "S" be connected and locally path-connected. We for points "a" and "b" in "S", we denote by the relation "a" ~ "b" that there exists a path between "a" and "b".

Lemma 1: ~ is an equivalence relation

We check:

#Reflexivity: "a" ~ "a", as evidenced by the trivial path gamma(t) = a.
#Symmetry: Suppose "a" ~ "b", and let gamma(t) be the associated path between "a" and "b". Then phi(t) = gamma(1-t) defines a continuous path from "b" to "a", and thus "b" ~ "a".
#Transitivity: Suppose "a" ~ "b", with associated path gamma(t), and "b" ~ "c", with associated path phi(t). Then let
psi(t) = egin{cases}gamma(2t) & 0 leq t leq 1/2\phi( 2t-1 ) & 1/2 < t leq 1.end{cases}

psi(t) is then a continuous path from "a" to "c", so "a" ~ "c".

Lemma 2: For a point "a" in "S", the equivalence class ["a"] is open

Let p in [a] . Then since "S" is locally path-connected, there is a neighborhood "U" of "p" so that, for every q in U, there is a path from "p" to "q". But then ["q"] = ["p"] = ["a"] , so U subset [a] and "p" is an interior point of ["a"] . Hence ["a"] is open.

Lemma 3: ["a"] is closed

Let "C" denote the complement of ["a"] . Then
C = igcup_{p otin [a] } [p] .
The union of open sets is open, and each term of the union is open by Lemma 1, so "C" is open, and hence ["a"] is closed.

Proof of theorem

Let "x" and "y" be two points of "S". Then by Lemmas 1 and 2, ["x"] is clopen, so since "S" is connected, ["x"] = "S". Hence y in [x] , and there exists a path between "x" and "y", and "S" is path-connected.


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