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The quotient space of a Topological Space
and an Equivalence Relation ~ on
is the
set of Equivalence Classes of points in
(under the Equivalence Relation )
together with the following topology given to subsets of
: a subset
of
is called open Iff
is open in
.
This can be stated in terms of Maps as follows: if
denotes the Map that sends each
point to its Equivalence Class in
, the topology on
can be specified by prescribing that a
subset of
is open Iff
is open.
In general, quotient spaces are not well behaved, and little is known about them. However, it is known that any compact
metrizable space is a quotient of the Cantor Set, any compact connected -dimensional Manifold for
is a
quotient of any other, and a function out of a quotient space
is continuous Iff the function
is continuous.
Let be the closed
-D Disk and
its boundary, the
-D sphere. Then
(which is homeomorphic to
), provides an example of a quotient space. Here,
is interpreted as the
space obtained when the boundary of the
-Disk is collapsed to a point, and is formally the ``quotient space by the
equivalence relation generated by the relations that all points in
are equivalent.''
See also Equivalence Relation, Topological Space
References
Munkres, J. R. Topology: A First Course. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1975.