Fσ set

In mathematics, an Fσ set (said F-sigma set) is a countable union of closed sets. The notation originated in France with F for fermé (French: closed) and σ for somme (French: sum, union).[1]

In metrizable spaces, every open set is an Fσ set.[2] The complement of an Fσ set is a Gδ set.[1] In a metrizable space, any closed set is a Gδ set.

The union of countably many Fσ sets is an Fσ set, and the intersection of finitely many Fσ sets is an Fσ set. Fσ is the same as in the Borel hierarchy.

Examples

Each closed set is an Fσ set.

The set of rationals is an Fσ set. The set of irrationals is not a Fσ set.

In a Tychonoff space, each countable set is an Fσ set, because a point is closed.

For example, the set of all points in the Cartesian plane such that is rational is an Fσ set because it can be expressed as the union of all the lines passing through the origin with rational slope:

where , is the set of rational numbers, which is a countable set.

gollark: Who is a mathy people?
gollark: We just need to find mathy people.
gollark: We could do mathology on here, no?
gollark: - encoding data in weird word choice/grammar
gollark: - weird punctuation

See also

References

  1. Stein, Elias M.; Shakarchi, Rami (2009), Real Analysis: Measure Theory, Integration, and Hilbert Spaces, Princeton University Press, p. 23, ISBN 9781400835560.
  2. Aliprantis, Charalambos D.; Border, Kim (2006), Infinite Dimensional Analysis: A Hitchhiker's Guide, Springer, p. 138, ISBN 9783540295877.


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