Diagonal product of mappings
,
The mapping defined by the equation
. The diagonal product of mappings
satisfies, for any
, the relation
, where
denotes the projection of the product
on the factor
. The diagonal product of continuous mappings is continuous. A family of mappings
of topological spaces is said to be partitioning if for any point
and neighbourhood
of
there exist an index
and an open subset
such that
. If
is a partitioning family of mappings and if
is the diagonal product of the mappings
, then
is an imbedding of
into the product
, i.e.
is a homeomorphism. The diagonal product of mappings was used by A.N. Tikhonov to imbed a completely-regular space of weight
in the cube
.
Comments
Instead of calling a family of mappings partitioning, one says that it separates points and closed sets.
In an arbitrary category with products, cf. Direct product, the diagonal product of mappings is given by the universal property defining the direct product. Indeed, categorically the product is an object together with morphisms:
such that for every family of morphisms
there is a unique morphism
such that
.
Tikhonov's imbedding result is in [a2]. E. Čech, inspired by Tikhonov's result, obtained the following imbedding theorem [a1]: Let be the family of continuous mappings from a completely-regular space
into the unit interval
. Then the diagonal mapping
is an imbedding, and the closure of
in
is equivalent to the Stone–Čech compactification of
.
References
[a1] | E. Čech, "On bicompact spaces" Ann. of Math. , 38 (1937) pp. 823–844 |
[a2] | A.N. [A.N. Tikhonov] Tichonoff, "Ueber die topologische Erweiterung von Räumen" Math. Ann. , 102 (1929) pp. 544–561 |
Diagonal product of mappings. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Diagonal_product_of_mappings&oldid=14452