In mathematics, a partition of unity of a topological space X is a set of continuous functions from X to the unit interval * such that every point has a neighbourhood where all but a finite number of the functions are identically zero, and the sum of all the functions on the entire space is identically 1,
The existence of partitions of unity assumes two distinct forms.
Thus one chooses either to have the supports indexed by the open cover, or the supports compact. If the space is compact, then there exist partitions satisfying both requirements.
Paracompactness of the space is a necessary condition to guarantee the existence of a partition of unity. Depending on the category which the space belongs to, it may also be a sufficient condition. The construction uses mollifiers (bump functions), which exist in the continuous and smooth categories, but not the analytic category. Thus analytic partitions of unity do not exist.
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"Partition of unity".
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