In mathematics, a subset of a topological space is called nowhere dense or rare if its closure has Empty set interior. In a very loose sense, it is a set whose elements are not tightly clustered (as defined by the topology on the space) anywhere. For example, the are nowhere dense among the real number, whereas the interval (0, 1) is not nowhere dense.
A countable union of nowhere dense sets is called a meagre set. Meagre sets play an important role in the formulation of the Baire category theorem, which is used in the proof of several fundamental results of functional analysis.
A subset of a topological space is said to be dense in another set if the intersection is a Dense set of is ' or ' in if is not dense in any nonempty open subset ofExpanding out the negation of density, it is equivalent that each nonempty open set contains a nonempty open subset disjoint from It suffices to check either condition on a base for the topology on In particular, density nowhere in is often described as being dense in no Open Interval.; although note that Oxtoby later gives the interior-of-closure definition on page 40.
Alternatively, the complement of the closure must be a dense subset of in other words, the exterior of is dense in
A set is nowhere dense if and only if its closure is.
Every subset of a nowhere dense set is nowhere dense, and a finite union of nowhere dense sets is nowhere dense. Thus the nowhere dense sets form an ideal of sets, a suitable notion of negligible set. In general they do not form a sigma-ideal, as , which are the countable unions of nowhere dense sets, need not be nowhere dense. For example, the set is not nowhere dense in
The boundary of every open set and of every closed set is closed and nowhere dense. A closed set is nowhere dense if and only if it is equal to its boundary, if and only if it is equal to the boundary of some open set (for example the open set can be taken as the complement of the set). An arbitrary set is nowhere dense if and only if it is a subset of the boundary of some open set (for example the open set can be taken as the exterior of ).
For another example (a variant of the Cantor set), remove from all , i.e. fractions of the form in lowest terms for positive integers and the intervals around them: Since for each this removes intervals adding up to at most the nowhere dense set remaining after all such intervals have been removed has measure of at least (in fact just over because of overlaps) and so in a sense represents the majority of the ambient space This set is nowhere dense, as it is closed and has an empty interior: any interval is not contained in the set since the dyadic fractions in have been removed.
Generalizing this method, one can construct in the unit interval nowhere dense sets of any measure less than although the measure cannot be exactly 1 (because otherwise the complement of its closure would be a nonempty open set with measure zero, which is impossible).
For another simpler example, if is any dense open subset of having finite Lebesgue measure then is necessarily a closed subset of having infinite Lebesgue measure that is also nowhere dense in (because its topological interior is empty). Such a dense open subset of finite Lebesgue measure is commonly constructed when proving that the Lebesgue measure of the rational numbers is This may be done by choosing any bijection (it actually suffices for to merely be a surjection) and for every letting (here, the Minkowski sum notation was used to simplify the description of the intervals). The open subset is dense in because this is true of its subset and its Lebesgue measure is no greater than Taking the union of closed, rather than open, intervals produces the F-subset that satisfies Because is a subset of the nowhere dense set it is also nowhere dense in Because is a Baire space, the set is a dense subset of (which means that like its subset cannot possibly be nowhere dense in ) with Lebesgue measure that is also a Nonmeager set of (that is, is of the second category in ), which makes a Comeager set of whose interior in is also empty; however, is nowhere dense in if and only if its in has empty interior. The subset in this example can be replaced by any countable dense subset of and furthermore, even the set can be replaced by for any integer
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