ZERO-DIMENSIONAL STATIONARY SUBSETS OF FINITE-DIMENSIONAL METRIC SPACES
MATHEMATICS
Submitted 1966-01-01 | SovietRxiv: ru-196601.61191 | Translated from Russian

Abstract Generated abstract

The paper studies stationary subsets of metrizable spaces, understood via a compatible metric as sets that must meet the image of every sufficiently small continuous self-map. It proves that every finite-dimensional metrizable space contains a closed zero-dimensional stationary subset, using standard partition characterizations of covering dimension and the equality of covering and large inductive dimension in metrizable spaces. The argument constructs separating closed partitions whose intersection is zero-dimensional, then modifies a compatible metric by auxiliary continuous functions so that any small perturbation map has image meeting this intersection. A broader version is stated for perfectly normal spaces satisfying finite equality of covering and large inductive dimension, and the paper closes by asking whether some metrizable space, possibly the Hilbert cube, lacks such a subset.

Full Text

UDC 513.831

MATHEMATICS

V. GOL’SHTINSKII

ZERO-DIMENSIONAL STATIONARY SUBSETS OF FINITE-DIMENSIONAL METRIC SPACES

(Presented by Academician P. S. Aleksandrov on 1 II 1966)

Definition. A subset \(A\) of a metrizable topological space \((X,T)\) will be called stationary if there exists on the set \(X\) a metric \(\rho\) compatible with the topology \(T\) (i.e., a metric satisfying the condition \(T_\rho=T\), where \(T_\rho\) is the topology induced by the metric \(\rho\)), and moreover the following condition is fulfilled:

\((U)\). For every continuous mapping \(f:X\to X\) for which \(\rho(x,f(x))<1\) for all points \(x\in X\), the relation
\[ A\cap f(X)=\varnothing \]
holds.

Let us note that if the space \((X,\rho)\) is a compact metric space, then the set \(A\subset X\) is stationary in the topological space \((X,T_\rho)\) if and only if there exists a number \(\varepsilon>0\) such that, for every continuous mapping \(f:X\to X\) satisfying the condition \(\rho(x,f(x))<\varepsilon\) for all points \(x\in X\), one has
\[ A\cap f(X)\ne\varnothing . \]

In this note we prove the existence of “small” stationary sets in the sense indicated below.

Theorem. In every finite-dimensional (in the sense of \(\dim\)) metrizable space \((X,T)\) there exists a zero-dimensional closed stationary subset.

Proof. Let \(\dim X=n\), where \(n\) is a natural number (the cases \(n=1\) and \(n=0\) are excluded as trivial). Then, as is known, there exist closed sets \(A_i\subset X\), \(i=\pm1,\pm2,\ldots,\pm n\), such that for any system of closed partitions \(F_i\) between the sets \(A_{-i}\) and \(A_i\), \(i=1,2,\ldots,n\), we have
\[ \bigcap_{i=1}^{n} F_i\ne\varnothing . \]

But, on the other hand, since the space \((X,T)\) is metrizable, \(\dim X=\operatorname{Ind} X\), and therefore there exist such closed partitions \(F_i\) that
\[ \dim \bigcap_{i=1}^{k} F_i=n-k . \]
In particular,
\[ \dim \bigcap_{i=1}^{n} F_i=0 . \]
We shall prove that the set
\[ F=\bigcap_{i=1}^{n} F_i \]
is stationary.

Indeed, let \(\rho_0\) be any metric on the space \(X\), compatible with the topology \(T\), and let \(g_i:X\to I\) be continuous mappings of the space \(X\) into the interval \(I=[-1,1]\) such that \(g_i(x)=\varepsilon\) for all points \(x\in A_{\varepsilon i}\), \(\varepsilon=-1\) or \(1\), and \(g_i(x)=0\) for all points \(x\in F_i\); finally, \(0<|g_i(x)|<1\) for all points \(x\in X\setminus(A_{-i}\cup F_i\cup A_i)\). Define a new metric on the space \(X\) by the equality
\[ \rho(x,y)=\rho_0(x,y)+\max_i |g_i(x)-g_i(y)| . \]

The metric \(\rho\) is also compatible with the topology \(T\).

Let now \(f:X\to X\) be an arbitrary continuous mapping, with \(\rho(x,f(x))<1\) for all \(x\in X\). Then \(g_i f(x)<0<g_i f(y)\) for all points \(x\in A_{-i}\), \(y\in A_i\); hence it follows that the sets \((g_i f)^{-1}(0)\) are partitions between the sets \(A_{-i}\) and \(A_i\), \(i=1,2,\ldots,n\). Therefore there exists a point \(x\in X\) such that \(g_i f(x)=0\) for all indices \(i=1,2,\ldots,n\). But then \(f(x)\in F\), i.e. \(F\cap f(x)\ne\varnothing\). The theorem is proved.

This result can be generalized.

Definition*. A subset \(A\) of a topological space \((X,T)\) will be called stationary if there exists on it a continuous pseudometric \(\rho\) for which condition \((\overline{\mathrm{y}})\) is satisfied.

Then we have

Theorem*. In every perfectly normal space \((X,T)\) for which \(\dim X=\operatorname{Ind}X<\infty\), there exists a closed stationary zero-dimensional subset.

Problem. Does there exist a metrizable space that contains no zero-dimensional closed stationary subset? Is the Hilbert brick \(I^{\aleph_0}\) such a space?

Warsaw University
Warsaw, Polish People’s Republic

Received
17 XII 1965

Submission history

ZERO-DIMENSIONAL STATIONARY SUBSETS OF FINITE-DIMENSIONAL METRIC SPACES