Proper map

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In mathematics, a function between topological spaces is called proper if inverse images of compact subsets are compact. In algebraic geometry, the analogous concept is called a proper morphism.

Definition

A function f : XY between two topological spaces is proper if the preimage of every compact set in Y is compact in X.

There are several competing descriptions. For instance, a continuous map f is proper if it is a closed map and the pre-image of every point in Y is compact. The two definitions are equivalent if Y is locally compact and Hausdorff. For a proof of this fact see the end of this section. More abstractly, f is proper if f is universally closed, i.e. if for any topological space Z the map

f × idZ: X × ZY × Z

is closed. These definitions are equivalent to the previous one if X is Hausdorff and Y is locally compact Hausdorff.

An equivalent, possibly more intuitive definition when X and Y are metric spaces is as follows: we say an infinite sequence of points {pi} in a topological space X escapes to infinity if, for every compact set SX only finitely many points pi are in S. Then a continuous map f : XY is proper if and only if for every sequence of points {pi} that escapes to infinity in X, {f(pi)} escapes to infinity in Y.

This last sequential idea looks like being related to the notion of sequentially proper, see a reference below.

Proof of fact

Let f: X \to Y be a continuous closed map, such that f^{-1}(y) is compact (in X) for all y \in Y. Let K be a compact subset of Y. We will show that f^{-1}(K) is compact.

Let \{ U_{\lambda} \vert \lambda\ \in\ \Lambda \} be an open cover of f^{-1}(K). Then for all k\ \in K this is also an open cover of f^{-1}(k). Since the latter is assumed to be compact, it has a finite subcover. In other words, for all k\ \in K there is a finite set \gamma_k \subset \Lambda such that f^{-1}(k) \subset \cup_{\lambda \in \gamma_k} U_{\lambda}. The set X \setminus \cup_{\lambda \in \gamma_k} U_{\lambda} is closed. Its image is closed in Y, because f is a closed map. Hence the set

V_k = Y \setminus f(X \setminus \cup_{\lambda \in \gamma_k} U_{\lambda}) is open in Y. It is easy to check that V_k contains the point k. Now K \subset \cup_{k \in K} V_k and because K is assumed to be compact, there are finitely many points k_1,\dots , k_s such that K \subset \cup_{i =1}^s V_{k_i}. Furthermore the set \Gamma = \cup_{i =1}^s \gamma_{k_i} is a finite union of finite sets, thus \Gamma is finite.

Now it follows that f^{-1}(K) \subset f^{-1}(\cup_{i=1}^s V_{k_i}) \subset \cup_{\lambda \in \Gamma} U_{\lambda} and we have found a finite subcover of f^{-1}(K), which completes the proof.

Properties

Generalization

It is possible to generalize the notion of proper maps of topological spaces to locales and topoi, see (Johnstone 2002).

See also

References

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  • Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found., esp. section C3.2 "Proper maps"
  • Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found., esp. p. 90 "Proper maps" and the Exercises to Section 3.6.
  • Brown, R. "Sequentially proper maps and a sequential compactification", J. London Math Soc. (2) 7 (1973) 515-522.
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