Abstract Generated abstract
This note studies continuous mappings from an open subset of the product of an arbitrary topological space with a Euclidean space into a Euclidean space, focusing on the behavior of the fiber maps under variation of the topological parameter. Using topological degree and local degree, it proves stability results for degrees, local surjectivity and openness near isolated preimages of nonzero degree, and implicit mapping theorems under differentiability and nonvanishing Jacobian assumptions. The paper also establishes openness and constancy properties for the sign of the Jacobian, finiteness of multiplicity on compact sets under suitable hypotheses, and an integral estimate for composed functions involving the Jacobian and the number of preimages.
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MATHEMATICS
A. M. RODNYANSKII
ON MAPPINGS OF THE PRODUCT OF A TOPOLOGICAL SPACE BY A EUCLIDEAN SPACE INTO A EUCLIDEAN SPACE
(Presented by Academician P. S. Aleksandrov, 28 II 1957)
In this note \(X\) is a topological space; \(R_y^q, R_u^q\) are \(q\)-dimensional Euclidean oriented spaces; \(Z=[X, R_y^q]\) is the topological product of \(X\) by \(R_y^q\); \(x, y, z, u\) (possibly with an index) are points respectively of the spaces \(X, R_y^q, Z, R_u^q\); \(O^x=O^x(x_0)\), \(O^y=O^y(y_0)\), \(O^z=O^z(z_0)=O^z(x_0,y_0)\), \(O^u=O^u(u_0)\) are absolute neighborhoods of the points \(x_0, y_0, z_0=(x_0,y_0), u_0\) in the spaces \(X, R_y^q, Z, R_u^q\), respectively; the same notations are adopted for absolute neighborhoods of subsets of the spaces \(X, R_y^q, Z, R_u^q\) relative to these spaces; \(\pi_x, \pi_y\) are the projections of the space \(Z\) respectively onto the spaces \(X, R_y^q\); \(G\) is a nonempty open subset of the space \(Z\); \(f\) is a continuous mapping of \(G\) into \(R_u^q\); \((x_0,y_0)\) is a point of \(G\); \(u_0=f(x_0,y_0)\); \(F^u\) is a closed subset of the space \(R_u^q\); \(\Phi^z\) is a compact subset \(\subset G\); \(\Lambda\) is the empty set; \(M\) is a subset of the space \(Z\).
In addition, the following notation and definitions are used:
1) \(M(x)=\{y:(x,y)\in M\}\).
2) \(\widetilde M=\{(x,y):(x,y)\in \overline M,\ x\in\pi_xM\}=\{(x,y):x\in\pi_xM,\ y\in\overline{M(x)}\}=\overline M\cap\pi_x^{-1}\pi_xM\).
3) \(M\) is locally bounded with respect to \(y\) if, for every \(x_1\in\pi_xM\), there is an \(O^x=O^x(x_1)\) such that \(\pi_y(M\cap\pi_x^{-1}O^x)\) is bounded in \(R_y^q\).
4) \(M\) is connected with respect to \(y\) if \(M(x)\) is connected for every \(x\in\pi_xM\).
5) \(f_x\) is the mapping of \(G(x)\) into \(R_u^q\) given by the formula \(f_x(y)=f(x,y)\) \((y\in G(x))\).
6) \(\hat f\) is the mapping of \(G\) into \([X,R_u^q]\) given by the formula \(\hat f(x,y)=(x,f(x,y))\).
7) \(E_g=(E)_g\) is the boundary of the set \(E\) relative to that one of the spaces \(X, R_y^q, Z, R_u^q\) which contains it.
8) \(m(E)\) is equal to the cardinality of the set \(E\) if \(E\) is finite or \(\Lambda\), and is equal to \(+\infty\) if \(E\) is infinite.
9) \(k(\Phi^z(x),f_x)=\sup m(\Phi^z(x)\cap f_x^{-1}u)\).
10) \(k(\Phi^z,f)=\sup_{x\in X}(\Phi^z(x),f_x)\).
11) If \(f_{x_0}\) is differentiable at the point \(y_0\), then \(J(f_{x_0},y_0)\) denotes the Jacobian of the mapping \(f_{x_0}\) at the point \(y_0\).
12) If, for every \(x\in\pi_xG\), the mapping \(f_x\) is differentiable on \(G(x)\), then we put
\[
G^+=\{(x,y):(x,y)\in G,\ J(f_x,y)>0\},\quad
G^-=\{(x,y):(x,y)\in G,\ J(f_x,y)<0\},\quad
G^0=\{(x,y),(x,y)\in G,\ J(f_x,y)=0\}.
\]
13) \(y_0\) is an isolated point of the mapping \(f_{x_0}\) if, for all sufficiently...
for sufficiently small \(h\ne 0\) we have \(f_{x_0}(y_0+h)\ne f_{x_0}(y_0)\). In this case the local degree \(\gamma(f_{x_0},y_0)\) is defined, equal to the degree \(\gamma(O^y,f_{x_0},u_0)\), where \(O^y=O^y(y_0)\) is sufficiently small. If \(f_{x_0}\) is differentiable at \(y_0\), and \(J(f_{x_0},y_0)\ne 0\), then, as is known, \(y_0\) is an isolated point of the mapping \(f_{x_0}\), and we have \(\gamma(f_{x_0},y_0)=\operatorname{sign} J(f_{x_0},y_0)\).
§ 1. In this section \(G\) is locally, with respect to \(y\); \(f\) is continuous in \(\widetilde G\).
Theorem 1. Let \(\overline G(x_0)\cap f_{x_0}^{-1}F^u\subseteq G(x_0)\). Then there exists \(O^x=O^x(x_0)\subseteq \pi_xG\) such that for all \(x\in O^x\) we have:
1.1) \(\overline G(x)\cap f_x^{-1}F^u\subseteq G(x)\);
1.2) for every \(u\in F^u\) the degree \(\gamma(G(x),f_x,u)=\gamma(G(x_0),f_{x_0},u)\) is defined.
Corollary 1. Let \(\overline G(x_0)\cap f_{x_0}^{-1}F^u\subseteq G(x_0)\), and suppose \(\gamma(G(x_0),f_{x_0},u)\ne 0\) for all \(u\in F^u\). Then there exists \(O^x=O^x(x_0)\) such that \(F^u\subseteq f_xG(x)\) for all \(x\in O^x\).
Corollary 2. Let \(C^x\) be connected, \(C^x\subseteq \pi_xG\), and suppose \(\overline G(x)\cap f_x^{-1}u_0\subseteq G(x)\) for all \(x\in C^x\). Then \(\gamma(G(x),f_x,u_0)=\mathrm{const}\) for all \(x\in C^x\).
Corollary 3. If \(F^u\cap f_{x_0}\overline G(x_0)=\Lambda\), then there exists \(O^x=O^x(x_0)\subseteq \pi_xG\) such that for all \(x\in O^x\), \(u\in F^u\), the degree \(\gamma(G(x),f_x,u)=0\) is defined.
Theorem 2. Let \(\overline G(x_0)\cap f_{x_0}^{-1}u_0\subseteq G(x_0)\), \(\gamma(G(x_0),f_{x_0},u_0)\ne 0\). Then for every sufficiently small \(O^u=O^u(u_0)\) there is an \(O^z=O^z([x_0,\overline G(x_0)\cap f_{x_0}^{-1}u_0])\subseteq G\) such that for all \(x\in \pi_xO^z\) we have:
2.1) \(f_xO^z(x)=O^u\);
2.2) \(\overline G(x)\cap f_x^{-1}O^u=O^z\);
2.3) for every \(u\in O^u\) the degree \(\gamma(O^z(x),f_x,u)=\gamma(G(x_0),f_{x_0},u_0)\) is defined.
Remark 1. All the results of the present section are, as far as I know, essentially new even in the case \(X=R^p\) with \(p>0\). For the case \(p=0\) (\(f\) is a mapping of \(G\), open in \(R_y^q\), into \(R_u^q\)), analogous results were obtained by me in \((^1,^2)\). I note that no restrictions are imposed on the space \(X\), except the fulfillment of the four Kuratowski axioms; it may even fail to be a \(T_0\)-space and need not satisfy the first axiom of countability. Also of interest is the case when \(X\) is an arbitrary subset of the space \(R^p\), and \(G\) is a set open in \([X,R_y^q]\).
§ 2. In this section \(y_0\) is an isolated point of the mapping \(f_{x_0}\), and \(\gamma(f_{x_0},y_0)\ne 0\).
Theorem 3. Let \(O^z=O^z(x_0,y_0)\) be given. Then for every sufficiently small (connected) \(O^u=O^u(u_0)\) there is a (connected with respect to \(y\)) \(O_1^z=O_1^z(x_0,y_0)\), contained in \(O^z\) and such that:
3.1) \(\widetilde O_1^z\subseteq G\);
3.2) \(\overline O_1^z\) is locally bounded with respect to \(y\);
3.3) \(\overline O_1^z(x_0)\cap f_{x_0}^{-1}u_0=\{y_0\}\);
3.4) \(f_xO_1^z(x)=O^u\) for every \(x\in \pi_xO_1^z\);
3.5) \(\overline O_1^z(x)\cap f_x^{-1}O^u=O_1^z(x)\bigl(\overline O_1^z(x)\cap f_x^{-1}O^u=O_1^z(x)\bigr)\) for every \(x\in \pi_xO_1^z\);
3.6) for any \(x\in \pi_xO_1^z\), \(u\in O^u\) the degree \(\gamma(O_1^z(x),f_x,u)=\gamma(f_{x_0},y_0)\) is defined;
3.7) \(\hat f\,\widetilde O_1^z=[\pi_xO_1^z,O^u]\);
3.8) \(\hat f\,(\widetilde O_1^z\setminus O_1^z)=[\pi_xO_1^z,\overline O^u\setminus O^u]\) \(\bigl(\hat f\,\widetilde O_1^z=[\pi_xO_1^z,\overline O^u]\bigr)\);
3.9) if \(x\in \pi_xO_1^z\), and \(f_x\) is differentiable on \(O_1^z(x)\), then
\[ \operatorname{mes}\{y:y\in O_1^z(x),\ \operatorname{sign}J(f_x,y)=\operatorname{sign}\gamma(f_{x_0},y_0)\}>0, \]
\[ \operatorname{mes} f_x\{y:y\in O_1^z(x),\ \operatorname{sign}J(f_x,y)=\operatorname{sign}\gamma(f_{x_0},y_0)\}=\operatorname{mes}O^u. \]
Corollary 1. The mapping \(\hat f\) is open at the point \((x_0,y_0)\).
Remark. All the results of the present paragraph are, as far as I know, essentially new even in the case \(X=R^p\) for \(p>0\). For the case \(p=0\) (\(f\) is a mapping of an open subset \(G\) in \(R_y^q\) into \(R_u^q\)) analogous results were obtained by me in \((^{3,4})\) under the additional assumption that \(f\) is differentiable in \(G\).
§ 3. In this paragraph the mapping \(f_x\) is differentiable in \(G(x)\) for every \(x\in \pi_x G\).
Theorem 4. Each of the sets \(\pi_x G^+\), \(\pi_x G^-\) is open in the space \(X\).
Theorem 5. If \(G^0=\Lambda\), then each of the sets \(G^+\), \(G^-\) is open in the space \(Z\).
Corollary 1. Let \(G^0=\Lambda\), and let \(C\) be a connected subset of the set \(G\). Then \(\operatorname{sign} J(f_x,y)=\mathrm{const}\) for all \((x,y)\in C\).
Corollary 2. If \(G^0=\Lambda\), and \(G\) is a domain, then \(\operatorname{sign} J(f_x,y)=\mathrm{const}\) for all \((x,y)\in G\).
Theorem 6. Let \(O^z=O^z(x_0,y_0)\subseteq G\setminus G^0\). Then for every sufficiently small connected \(O^u=O^u(u_0)\) there exists a locally bounded in \(y\) and connected in \(y\) neighborhood \(O_1^z=O_1^z(x_0,y_0)\), contained in \(O^z\), such that the mapping \(\varphi\), defined on the set \([\pi_x O_1^z,O^u]\) by the formula
\[ \varphi(x,u)=O_1^z(x)\cap f_x^{-1}u \qquad ((x,u)\in[\pi_x O_1^z,O^u]), \]
is a single-valued continuous open mapping of the set \([\pi_x O_1^z,O^u]\) into the space \(R_y^q\), and we have:
6,1) for every \(x\in\pi_x O_1^z\) the mapping \(f_x\) is a differentiable topological mapping of \(O_1^z(x)\) onto \(O^u\);
6,2) for every fixed \(x\in\pi_x O_1^z\) the mapping \(\varphi_x\) \((\varphi_x(u)=\varphi(x,u))\) is a differentiable topological mapping of \(O^u\) onto \(O_1^z(x)\), inverse to the mapping \(f_x\), considered on \(O_1^z(x)\);
6,3) for every fixed \(u\in O^u\) the mapping \(\varphi_u\) \((\varphi_u(x)=\varphi(x,u))\) is a continuous mapping of \(\pi_x O_1^z\) into \(R_y^q\), and we have:
\[ f(x,\varphi_u(x))=u \qquad (x\in\pi_x O_1^z), \]
i.e. \(\varphi_u\) is the unique continuous implicit mapping determined from the equation
\[ f(x,y)=u \qquad ((x,y)\in O_1^z); \]
6,4) \(\hat f\) is a topological mapping of \(O_1^z\) onto \([\pi_x O_1^z,O^u]\);
6,5) \(\varphi(x,u)=\pi_y(\hat f^{-1}(x,u))\) for all \((x,u)\in[\pi_x O_1^z,O^u]\).
Theorem 7. Let \(q=1\), and let \(O^z=O^z(x_0,y_0)\) be such that for every \(x\in\pi_x O_1^z\) the set \((O^z\cap G^0)(x)\) contains not more than one point. Suppose, further, that \(k\) is a nonnegative integer such that the function \(f_x\) is differentiable \(2k\) times in some neighborhood of the point \(y_0\) and has a finite derivative of order \(2k+1\) at the point \(y_0\), and moreover
\[ \frac{d^l f_{x_0}}{dy^l}(y_0)=0 \qquad (1\leq l\leq 2k), \qquad \frac{d^{2k+1}f_{x_0}}{dy^{2k+1}}(y_0)\neq 0. \]
Then for every sufficiently small interval \(O^u=O^u(u_0)\) there exists a locally bounded in \(y\) and connected in \(y\) neighborhood \(O_1^z=O_1^z(x_0,y_0)\),
contained in \(O^z\) and such that the function \(\varphi\), defined on the set \([\pi_x O_1^z, O^u]\) by the formula
\[ \varphi(x,u)=O_1^z(x)\cap f_x^{-1}u \qquad ((x,u)\in[\pi_x O_1^z,O^u]), \]
effects a one-to-one continuous open mapping of the set \([\pi_x O_1^z,O^u]\) onto the line \(R_y^1\); moreover assertions 6, 1)—6, 5) hold.
Theorem 8. Let \(G^0=\Lambda\); let \(X\) be a Hausdorff space satisfying the first axiom of countability. Then \(k(\Phi^z,f)<+\infty\).
Theorem 9. Let \(G^0=\Lambda\); let \(X\) be a metric space with a countable base, and suppose that an outer Carathéodory measure \(\mu_x\) is given in \(X\) such that every point \(x\in X\) has a neighborhood of finite \(\mu_x\)-measure. By \(\mu_y,\mu_u\) denote the \(q\)-dimensional Lebesgue measures, respectively, in the spaces \(R_y^q,R_u^q\). Further, let \(\varphi(u)\) be a complex function, defined on \(f\Phi^z\) (almost everywhere on \(f\Phi^z\)) and summable on \(f\Phi^z\). Finally, suppose that
\[ \inf_{(x,y)\in\Phi^z}\operatorname{vrai}|J(f_x,y)|=m>0. \tag{1} \]
Then the function \(\varphi(f(x,y))\) is defined on \(\Phi^z\) (almost everywhere on \(\Phi^z\)), is summable on \(\Phi^z\), and
\[ \int_{\Phi^z}|\varphi(f(x,y))|\,d(\mu_x\times\mu_y) \leq \frac{2}{m}k(\Phi^z,f)\,\mu_x(\pi_x,\Phi^z) \int_{f\Phi^z}|\varphi(u)|\,d\mu_u<+\infty. \]
If, however, \(\operatorname{sign}J(f_x,y)=\mathrm{const}\) for all \((x,y)\in\Phi^z\), then the constant 2 on the right-hand side of the last inequality is replaced by the constant 1.
Remark. All the results of the present paragraph are essentially new even in the case \(X=R^p\) with \(p>0\). For \(p=0\) (\(f\) is a mapping, open in \(R_y^q\), of the set \(G\) into \(R_u^q\)) results analogous to Corollary 2 of Theorem 5 and Theorem 6 were obtained by me in \((^3)\). Particular cases of Corollary 2 of Theorem 6 were obtained by L. D. Kudryavtsev in \((^{5,6})\).
Theorems 4, 5, and 7 are essentially new also in the case when \(X=R^p\), and \(f\) is differentiable jointly in all the variables \(x_1,\ldots,x_p; y_1,\ldots,y_q\).
Theorems 8 and 9 are essentially new in the case \(X=R^p\), \(\mu_x\) is \(p\)-dimensional Lebesgue measure, and under any assumptions concerning the smoothness of the mapping \(f\). Moreover, if the partial derivatives of the mapping functions \(\partial f_i/\partial y_j\) \((i,j=1,\ldots,q)\) are continuous jointly in the variables \(x_1,\ldots,x_p; y_1,\ldots,y\), then the conditions \(G^0=\Lambda\) and (1) in Theorems 8 and 9 are unnecessary. It is enough to require that \(\Phi^z\subseteq G\setminus G^0\).
Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology
Received
27 II 1957
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