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Wednesday, April 2, 2025

Proving Homeomorphism with Yoneda Lemma: The Unification of epsilon-delta and epsilon-N Formulation

Let us consider the submetric space of R:

S:={0}{1nnN>0}R.

We want to prove that SN via the Yoneda Lemma.

Recall that in last blog, we defined a functor F, which is representable:

FHomHaus(N,).

By the Yoneda Lemma, if we can prove that FHomHaus(S,), then we obtain SN.

Let us do it.


Proposition

Let S:={0}{1nnN>0}R, equipped with the subspace topology inherited from R. Let f:SX be a function into a Hausdorff space X. Then the following are equivalent:

  1. f(1/n)f(0);

  2. f is continuous.


Proof

Direction (1) (2): If the sequence converges, then f is continuous

We only need to check continuity at x=0, since {1nnN>0} is discrete.

Let U0 be an open neighborhood of f(0). By the definition of convergence, there exists NN such that nN, we have f(1/n)U0.

Hence,

f1(U0)={0}{1nnN}{1nf(1/n)U0 and n<N},

which is open in S.

Direction (2) (1): If f is continuous, then f(1/n)f(0)

Assume f is continuous. Then, since continuous functions map convergent sequences to convergent sequences, we have

f(1/n)f(0).

Hence, we see that

HomHaus(N,)FHomHaus(S,).

By the Yoneda Lemma, it follows that NS.


Remark

Now, we can see that there is no difference between the ϵδ and ϵN formulations. The ϵN language is simply the ϵδ definition applied to the point 0S.

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