In topology and related branches of mathematics, a connected space is a topological space which cannot be written as the disjoint union of two or more nonempty open spaces. Connectedness is one of the principal topological properties that is used to distinguish topological spaces. A stronger notion is that of a path-connected space, which is a space where any two points can be joined by a path.
It is usually easy to think about what is not connected. A simple example would be a space consisting of two rectangles, each of which is a space and not adjoined to the other. The space is not connected since two rectangles are disjoint. Another good example is a space with an annulus removed. The space is not connected since you cannot connect two points, one inside the annulus and the other outside; hence the term "connect".
Also, in a sense, a connected space is a generalization of an interval on the real number line, just as a topological space is, so to speak, an attempt to generalize an interval.
For a topological space X the following conditions are equivalent:
The maximal nonempty connected subsets of any topological space are called the connected components of the space. The components form a partition of the space (that is, they are disjoint and their union is the whole space). Every component is a closed subset of the original space. The components in general need not be open: the components of the rational numbers, for instance, are the one-point sets. A space in which all components are one-point sets is called totally disconnected. Related to this property, a space X is called totally separated if, for any two elements x and y of X, there exist disjoint open neighborhoods U of x and V of y such that X is the union of U and V. Clearly any totally separated space is totally disconnected, but the converse does not hold. For example take two copies of the rational numbers Q, and identify them at every point except zero. The resulting space, with the quotient topology, is totally disconnected. However, by considering the two copies of zero, the space is not totally separated, or even Hausdorff.
The space X is said to be path-connected if for any two points x and y in X there exists a continuous function f from the unit interval * to X with f(0) = x and f(1) = y. (This function is called a path from x to y.)
Every path-connected space is connected. Example of connected spaces that are not path-connected include the extended long line L* and the topologist's sine curve.
However, subsets of the real line R are connected if and only if they are path-connected; these subsets are the intervals of R. Also, open subsets of Rn or Cn are connected if and only if they are path-connected. Additionally, connectedness and path-connectedness are the same for finite topological spaces.
A space X is said to be arc-connected if any two distinct points can be joined by an arc, that is a path f which is a homeomorphism between the unit interval and its image f([0,1). It can be shown any Hausdorff space which is path-connected is also arc-connected. An example of a space which is path-connected but not arc-connected is provided by adding a second copy 0' of 0 to the nonnegative real numbers
Similarly, a topological space is said to be locally path-connected if it has a base of path-connected sets. An open subset of a locally path-connected space is connected if and only if it is path-connected. This generalizes the earlier statement about Rn and Cn, each of which is locally path-connected. More generally, any topological manifold is locally path-connected.
General topology | Properties of topological spaces
Zusammenhang (Topologie) | Connexité (mathématiques) | קשירות (טופולוגיה) | Spazio connesso | Przestrzeń spójna | Conexidade | Polkuyhtenäisyys | 连通空间
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It uses material from the
"Connected space".
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