Topology - Interior of set - Rudin

In summary, Rudin's Principles of Mathematical Analysis poses a problem in which one must prove that the complement of the set of all interior points of a given set E, denoted as E*, is equal to the closure of the complement of E. The proof begins by showing that the complement of the interior points of E is a subset of the closure of the complement of E. However, the second paragraph of the attempted proof is flawed, making an unwarranted assumption. Instead, it is shown that any point in the complement of E* is either a limit point of E^c or an isolated point, thus proving that the complement of E* is indeed the closure of the complement of E.
  • #1
TPAINE
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Homework Statement



I am trying to solve part d of problem 9 in chapter 2 of Rudin's Principles of Mathematical Analysis. The problem is: Let E* denote the set of all interior points of a set E (in a metric space X). Prove the complement of E* is the closure of the complement of E.

I will use E^c to denote the complement of E. It might be helpful to pull out Rudin and follow along; my notation is poor and the problem will make more sense.



2. The attempt at a solution
Proof:
First, we show that the complement of the interior points of E is a subset of the closure of the complement of E. Because the interior of E lies in E, the complement of E lies in the complement of the interior of E. Then because the complement of the interior of E is closed, the closure of the complement of E lies in the complement of the interior of E.

Now we need to show (E*)^c is in the closure of E^c. Pick an arbitrary point p in (E*)^c, Then it is not an interior point of E, and all neighborhoods around it contain a point of E^c. Then p is a limit point of E^c, and lies in the closure of E^c.


3. The error!
I have just shown that (E*)^c= closure(E^c). Now E*^c is obviously closed, because the interior of E is always open (this is part a of the problem). The second paragraph shows that any point in E*^c is a limit point of E^c. Now if E is open, E* and E are the same, so this would show that any point in E^c is a limit point of E^c. This would mean E^c is always a perfect set (closed and every point is a limit point). Surely this is much too strong: the complement of an arbitrary open set is not always perfect!?
 
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  • #2
I'm not sure there is any error. It seems plausible to me that the complement of an open set in a metric space includes all its limit points and is closed. (I am not an expert in this, but I am, say, 95% sure this is correct).
 
  • #3
PAllen, what you are saying it true- but irrelevant. The question is not whether it contains all of its limit points, which is true of any closed set, but whether all of its points are limit points.

Consider the set E= (-1, 0)U(0, 1). That is an open set. Its complement is (-inf, 1]U {0}U[1, inf) which is closed but not a perfect set because 0 is not a limit point.
 
  • #4
HallsofIvy said:
PAllen, what you are saying it true- but irrelevant. The question is not whether it contains all of its limit points, which is true of any closed set, but whether all of its points are limit points.

Consider the set E= (-1, 0)U(0, 1). That is an open set. Its complement is (-inf, 1]U {0}U[1, inf) which is closed but not a perfect set because 0 is not a limit point.

Yes, thanks, I see. So it is the second paragraph of the OP 'proof' that is flawed, making an unwarranted assumption. The desired result has to achieved a different way.
 
  • #5
Yes. Specifically, the statement "Pick an arbitrary point p in (E*)^c, Then it is not an interior point of E, and all neighborhoods around it contain a point of E^c" is not true. In my example, 0 is a point of (E*)^c= E^c but no neighborhod around it contains another point in E^c. What is true is that any point in (E*)^c is either a limit point of E^c or is an isolated point. In either case it is in the closure of E^c.
 

Related to Topology - Interior of set - Rudin

1. What is the interior of a set in topology?

The interior of a set in topology refers to the largest open set that is contained within the given set. It is the collection of all points within the set that do not lie on the boundary of the set.

2. How is the interior of a set defined in Rudin's "Principles of Mathematical Analysis"?

In Rudin's "Principles of Mathematical Analysis", the interior of a set A is denoted as int(A) and is defined as the set of all points x in A for which there exists an open set U that is contained in A and contains x.

3. What is the relationship between the interior of a set and its closure?

The interior of a set and its closure are complementary concepts. The interior of a set is the largest open set contained within the given set, while the closure of a set is the smallest closed set that contains the given set. In other words, the interior of a set is contained within its closure.

4. How can the interior of a set be calculated or determined?

The interior of a set can be determined using the interior operator int(A), which is defined as the union of all open sets contained within A. Alternatively, the interior of a set can also be calculated by subtracting the boundary and the exterior of the set from the set itself.

5. What are some properties of the interior of a set?

Some properties of the interior of a set include:

  • The interior of a set is always open.
  • The interior of a set is the largest open set contained within the given set.
  • The interior of a set is always a subset of the given set.
  • If the interior of a set is equal to the given set, then the set is open.
  • The interior of a set is always contained within its closure.

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