Kuratowski's closure-complement problem

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In the mathematical subject of topology, Kuratowski's closure-complement problem is the question how many distinct sets can be obtained by repeatedly applying the set operations of closure and complement to a given starting subset of a topological space. The answer is: no more than 14. This result was first published by Kazimierz Kuratowski in 1922. It follows easily from the following facts that hold for any subsets S of a space, writing S^ for the closure of S, So for the interior of S, and S' for its complement:

(1) S^ ^ = S^

(2) S‘‘ = S

(3) S^ ' ^ ' ^ ' ^ = S^ ' ^

The first two are trivial. (3) follows easily from the fact that So ^ o ^ = So ^ (together with the triviality that So = S‘ ^ ‘ ).

Many variations have appeared since, especially after 1960.

A subset realizing the maximum of 14 is called a 14-set. The real numbers in their standard topology have subsets that are 14-sets. One such subset is:

(0,1) \cup(1,2)\cup\{3\}\cup\bigl([4,5]\cap\Q\bigr),

where (0,1) and (1,2) denote open intervals and [4,5] denotes a closed interval.

[edit] References

[edit] External links

[http://www.latrobe.edu.au/mathstats/department/algebra-research-group/Papers/GJ_Kuratowski.pdf The Kuratowski Closure-Complement Problem] by B.J. Gardner and Marcel Jackson

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