Multivalued Maps And Differential Inclusions: Elements Of Theory And Applications
Y) and the complement of a set X with respect to the whole space Y. If
Let X be a set; by a topology on X we mean a system τ of subsets of X satisfying the following conditions:
1)
2)if U and V belong to τ then their intersection U ⋂ V belongs to τ;
3)the union of each family of sets from τ belongs to τ.
Elements of the system τ are called open sets, and the pair (X, τ) is said to be a topological space. If the topology τ is implicitly meant we say simply about the topological space X.
If τ is a topology on a space X then its base is a subsystem τ1 ⊂ τ such that each element from τ can be represented as the union of a certain family of elements from τ1.
The set of real numbers usually is endowed with the topology whose base consists of intervals (a, b).
Let (X, τ) be a topological space; a neighborhood of a point x ∈ X is any subset of X in which an open set containing x lies. Similarly, any subset of X in which an open set containing a subset A ⊂ X lies is called a neighborhood of a set A. A subset of X is open if and only if it is a neighborhood for each of its points.
The interior of a set A is the largest open set contained in A, it will be denoted as int A. The points of int A are called interior points of A.
A subset A of a topological space X is called closed if its complement X \ A is open. The closure
A topological space X is said to be separable, if it contains a countable subset A which is dense in X, i.e.,
Let (X1, τ1), (X2, τ2) be topological spaces; the topology in the Cartesian product X1 × X2 is generated in the following way: its base consists of the sets having the form Uα × Uβ, where Uα ∈ τ1, Uβ ∈ τ2. The set X1 × X2 endowed with such topology is called the topological product of X1 and X2.
A topological space X is called:
(i)T1-space if each one-point set in X is closed;
(ii)Hausdorff if any two different points from X possess disjoint neighborhoods;
(iii)regular if it is a T1-space such that any point from X and any closed subset to which it does not belong, possess disjoint neighborhoods;
(iv)normal if it is a T1-space such that any two its disjoint closed subsets possess disjoint neighborhoods.
Let X, Y be topological spaces; a map f : X → Y is continuous if the set f−1(V) = {x|x ∈ X, f(x) ∈ V} is open in X for each open set V ⊂ Y.
A topological space X defines on each of its subsets A ⊂ X the topology whose open sets are the intersections of A with open subsets of X. Such topology is called relative or induced. The subset A with this topology is said to be a subspace (of a space X). If A is a subspace of X then a map i : A → X defined by the rule i (x) = x is called the inclusion map. It is easy to see that the inclusion map is continuous.
A subset A of a topological space X is called connected, if it can not be represented as the union of two nonempty disjoint open (in the relative topology) sets. An open connected subset of a topological space is said to be a domain.
Let X be a topological space; a function f : X →
respectively,
is open. While considering upper semicontinuous functions, it is often convenient to assume that they act into the extended set of real numbers
Let
1)α ≤ β, β ≤ γ imply α ≤ γ for every α, β, γ ∈
2)α ≤ α for every α ∈
3)for every α, β ∈
A map of a directed set