What is a Homeomorphism

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 20 дек 2024

Комментарии •

  • @izaakvandongen7404
    @izaakvandongen7404 4 года назад +6

    At 11:00, it certainly is possible to remove a point from that interval without disconnecting it. Just take an endpoint! I think the more usual topological invariants used here include "can remove two points without disconnecting it" or "the number of points you can remove that do not disconnect it" or "the number of points you can remove that do disconnect it".

  • @frozenmoon998
    @frozenmoon998 4 года назад +11

    Casuals: *homomorphism*
    Dr P: *homeomorphism*
    I've waited for this for a long time - it's quite the treat.

    • @jrm6114
      @jrm6114 9 месяцев назад +1

      he said that they are different

  • @naturemeets
    @naturemeets 4 года назад +6

    WoW !, Thanks, Dr. Peyam. " NEVER ENDING LEARNING"

  • @gandalfthethotful479
    @gandalfthethotful479 3 года назад +1

    Thanks!

    • @drpeyam
      @drpeyam  3 года назад +2

      Thank you so much for the super thanks, I really appreciate it!!!

    • @gandalfthethotful479
      @gandalfthethotful479 3 года назад +1

      @@drpeyam absolutely! I love the way you teach. Less boring and more by example 👍

  • @SebastianBaum-z2l
    @SebastianBaum-z2l Год назад +1

    I enjoyed this video really much. You explained it clearly, while you have such an good welcoming attitude. Keep going!

  • @carterwoodson8818
    @carterwoodson8818 4 года назад +6

    @5:16 Remembers pate a modeler but not play-doh that was excellent!
    Ive heard rubber sheet geometry as well, would say "modelling clay" if wanting to avoid the brand name haha

  • @AltinoSantos
    @AltinoSantos 4 года назад +5

    A good video. Good selection of properties and examples. Congratulations.

  • @sostotenonsosjojododahohlo4580
    @sostotenonsosjojododahohlo4580 10 месяцев назад

    Dr. Peyam, you are one of the greats on math youtube. I am studying topology right now and some concept can be hard to grasp. Thank you for making videos like this, it really helps! Also you seem like such a fun guy to be around, the energy you give off is amazing. Keep up the good work!

    • @drpeyam
      @drpeyam  10 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you so much :3

  • @francaisdeuxbaguetteiii7316
    @francaisdeuxbaguetteiii7316 4 года назад +21

    topology is one of my favourite subjects.

  • @dabbinrascal7975
    @dabbinrascal7975 4 года назад +2

    Yes I’ve been waiting for this!!! Thank you :)

  • @umerfarooq4831
    @umerfarooq4831 4 года назад +4

    'Coffee cup is like a donut' well so much for my donut cravings

  • @denifventear609
    @denifventear609 3 года назад +7

    You wouldn't believe it but I had to learn and apply this notion in literature for a project haha... So thanks for making it easy enough for me to understand!

    • @BaterWottleDog
      @BaterWottleDog Год назад +2

      im learning this to make math jokes in ceramics class

  • @vardhanshah
    @vardhanshah Год назад

    Great explanation!

  • @darrenpeck156
    @darrenpeck156 2 года назад

    Wow, awesome and concise presentation.

  • @dariushanson314
    @dariushanson314 2 года назад

    I did not expect an Animorph’s reference. Excellent video.

  • @nocomment296
    @nocomment296 3 года назад +1

    I wasn't interested in maths but watching 3b1r bprp and some other RUclips channel including yours has completely changed my view....
    Now I want to do MSc in mathematics... It's an interesting subject

    • @drpeyam
      @drpeyam  3 года назад +1

      Congratulations :)

  • @ahmedmghabat7982
    @ahmedmghabat7982 4 года назад +2

    This guy is a legend!!!

  • @willnewman9783
    @willnewman9783 4 года назад +1

    20:23 Compact subspaces are not always closed subsets, so this proof does not work. Also, the proof cannot work because it is not true that continuous maps from a compact space are homomorphism, one needs the target to be Hausdorff

  • @samidracula1484
    @samidracula1484 2 года назад

    a very good video and explanation , thank you very much

  • @nocomment296
    @nocomment296 3 года назад

    Thanks sir for such explanation

  • @ecologypig
    @ecologypig 2 года назад

    crystal clear! thanks!

  • @shivaudaiyar2556
    @shivaudaiyar2556 4 года назад

    Thanks for such a great content with love from India

  • @f5673-t1h
    @f5673-t1h 4 года назад +10

    In short: Homeomorphisms are just relabelling the points and getting the same topology.

    • @janouglaeser8049
      @janouglaeser8049 4 года назад +1

      Precisely

    • @krumpy8259
      @krumpy8259 4 года назад +2

      I love those "In short" comments, they give further insights.

  • @deeptochatterjee532
    @deeptochatterjee532 4 года назад +2

    I don't know much about topology, is there a way to define the limit of a sequence in a topological space without a metric?

    • @drpeyam
      @drpeyam  4 года назад +5

      Yes, sn goes to s if for all neighborhoods of s there is N large enough such that for n > N, sn is in that neighborhood

  • @Zubair622
    @Zubair622 Год назад

    You made topology interesting

  • @aurangzeb5735
    @aurangzeb5735 3 года назад

    Sir at 0:43 you said that in homeomarphism the function can be from one matric space to another space and at 3:20 you said topology does not see distances. My question is, metric spaces cares about distances so how can we take
    Metric space as a function in homeomarphism definition?

    • @dariushanson314
      @dariushanson314 2 года назад

      I recommend Munkres Topology for this. Metric spaces are how topological spaces are constructed, and if the inverse of a bijective mapping from one topological space to another is continuous, you have yourself a homeomorphism.

  • @FT029
    @FT029 4 года назад +1

    I really like all the motivating examples you give (e.g. the continuous bijection whose inverse isn't continuous)!
    I am a little curious about the proof of the property at 9:14.

    • @drpeyam
      @drpeyam  4 года назад +1

      Continuity and Compactness ruclips.net/video/6Ql6TpnpwDE/видео.html

    • @FT029
      @FT029 4 года назад +1

      @@drpeyam thanks!

  • @soumyadipdey473
    @soumyadipdey473 3 года назад

    Very nice sir

  • @noahtaul
    @noahtaul 4 года назад +3

    13:28 ...but both (0,1) and [0,1] are open in themselves, so this doesn’t prove they aren’t homeomorphic. You just showed there’s no homeomorphism of R that sends (0,1) to [0,1], which isn’t the same thing. You need the compactness again, or the fact that there are points of [0,1] you can remove and have the remainder be connected, while this is false for (0,1).

  • @chriswinchell1570
    @chriswinchell1570 4 года назад

    Hi Dr., If you find time, can you make a video about the first homology group? Thanks.

    • @drpeyam
      @drpeyam  4 года назад

      No way haha

    • @chriswinchell1570
      @chriswinchell1570 4 года назад

      @@drpeyam I’m fairly sure you must have taken algebraic topology and you took it more recently than I because you’re still suffering from ptsd.

  • @dominicellis1867
    @dominicellis1867 4 года назад

    if you were to curve out the real line into a circle does that mean circles are homeomorphic to the real number line and subsequently any interval on the real number line could you also map the xy plane/the complex plane to a sphere mapping x to a circle generated by theta and y to the semi circle generated by angle psi?

    • @Apollorion
      @Apollorion 4 года назад +2

      So far as I understood it...
      - The real line has two open ends, but a plain circle hasn't, so they aren't homeomorphic.
      - If from the plain circle you'd take away a single point though, what'd be left of the circle would be homeomorphic with a line.
      - Those semi circles need to be open ended, too. So the complex plane won't be homeomorphic with the full surface of a sphere. The way of projection you propose leaves open the poles, as shared end points of the semi circles, and also doesn't include a continuous curve on the sphere surface connecting these poles and that's nowhere parallel to the equator.
      If you 'wish' to project the complex plane on the surface of a sphere, I think a sort of Riemann sphere would do better:
      - where the equator equals the unit-circle,
      - one pole equals the origin,
      - the other pole equals infinitely big, which is the point that is not part of the complex plane.
      - Longitude is just the argument or phase of the complex number.
      - Latitude is just dependent on the modulus.

  • @FloduQ
    @FloduQ 4 года назад

    Is it enough to find one homeomorphism f, so that M and N are homeomorphics ? or do we have to say they are homeomorphics for the specific homeomorphism f ?

    • @drpeyam
      @drpeyam  4 года назад +1

      One is enough

  • @narutosaga12
    @narutosaga12 4 года назад

    11:50 how is it that it is both not homeomorphic and homeomorphic at the same time?

    • @drpeyam
      @drpeyam  4 года назад +5

      No they are not homeomorphic. If I said they are, I misspoke

  • @wiloux
    @wiloux 4 года назад +2

    maths is just playing with some pâte à modeler after all ;)

  • @aneeshsrinivas9088
    @aneeshsrinivas9088 10 месяцев назад

    Fun fact, JRPG maps are the same as a donut; not a sphere. This is another interesting example of a homeomorphism.

    • @drpeyam
      @drpeyam  10 месяцев назад

      Interesting!!

  • @SS-ld2hk
    @SS-ld2hk 3 года назад

    does (0,1) homeomorphic to R imply that any interval in R is homeomorphism to R

    • @drpeyam
      @drpeyam  3 года назад

      I think so, at least any open one

  • @anchalmaurya2372
    @anchalmaurya2372 2 года назад

    Sir, 1/2x is not continuous at 0 but apne [0, 2] liya h?

  • @Happy_Abe
    @Happy_Abe 4 года назад +2

    Animorph fans represent!

  • @aneeshsrinivas9088
    @aneeshsrinivas9088 2 года назад

    is there a special name for homeomorphisms which are uniformly continuous?

    • @drpeyam
      @drpeyam  2 года назад

      unimorphisms

  • @aneeshsrinivas9088
    @aneeshsrinivas9088 2 года назад

    Imagine being able to transform any object into any other object as long as they are toplologically homeomorphic in real life(like for example being able to transform a torus into a coffee mug)? How would that be as a superpower ?

    • @drpeyam
      @drpeyam  2 года назад

      Not very effective…

  • @ekadria-bo4962
    @ekadria-bo4962 2 года назад

    By the definition, i wonder:
    Is R^N Homeomorphic to any interval?

    • @drpeyam
      @drpeyam  2 года назад +1

      No if n >= 2 because if you remove a point from R^n it’s still connected but if you remove a point from an interval it becomes disconnected

    • @ekadria-bo4962
      @ekadria-bo4962 2 года назад

      @@drpeyam i wonder now. What its still true in R^1 and 2 ?

  • @isobar5857
    @isobar5857 4 года назад +2

    Well you may not know the the difference between a donut and a cup of coffee but I do...I can eat a donut . Did I pass the test...it was a test, wasn't it ? Sorry for the levity...I gave up on maths after calculus 3. Have a good day sir.

  • @Caleepo
    @Caleepo 4 года назад

    Isnt homeomorphism the same as isomorphism ?

    • @mikhailmikhailov8781
      @mikhailmikhailov8781 4 года назад +3

      In the category of topological spaces it is. The notion of isomorphism is that you can exactly match two objects and their structure, whatever the structure in question might be.

    • @Caleepo
      @Caleepo 4 года назад

      @@mikhailmikhailov8781 aight thank you for your answer, But is there a case in which they are actually different ?

    • @mikhailmikhailov8781
      @mikhailmikhailov8781 4 года назад +1

      @@Caleepo isomorphism is just a generic term for any sort of equivalence between mathematical objects.

  • @aneeshsrinivas9088
    @aneeshsrinivas9088 2 года назад

    But is there an explicit formula to go from a coffee cup to a donut?

  • @Tomaplen
    @Tomaplen 4 года назад +1

    Will Lord Peyam have differential geometry videos on 2021? Would be amazing

    • @drpeyam
      @drpeyam  4 года назад

      I’m planning on doing a miniseries on differential forms, sometimes later this year

  • @gordonchan4801
    @gordonchan4801 4 года назад

    donuts at home

  • @lacasadeacero
    @lacasadeacero 4 года назад

    The morphism Is something new. Like Stokes theorem. I think we'll find a profound use.

  • @vedants.vispute77
    @vedants.vispute77 4 года назад

    What is your IQ sir?

  • @dgrandlapinblanc
    @dgrandlapinblanc 2 года назад

    Ok. So (f)-1 is continuous on the circle of radius 1 to the (0,2pi] because she's one to one and not onto sorry.
    Thank you very much.