Preservation of the Borel class under open-$LC$ functions
📝 Original Info
- Title: Preservation of the Borel class under open-$LC$ functions
- ArXiv ID: 1102.3253
- Date: 2011-02-17
- Authors: Alexey Ostrovsky
📝 Abstract
Let $X$ be a Borel subset of the Cantor set \textbf{C} of additive or multiplicative class ${\alpha},$ and $f: X \to Y$ be a continuous function with compact preimages of points onto $Y \subset \textbf{C}.$ If the image $f(U)$ of every clopen set $U$ is the intersection of an open and a closed set, then $Y$ is a Borel set of the same class. This result generalizes similar results for open and closed functions.💡 Deep Analysis

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arXiv:1102.3253v1 [math.GN] 16 Feb 2011
PRESERVATION OF THE BOREL CLASS UNDER
OPEN-LC FUNCTIONS
ALEXEY OSTROVSKY
Abstract. Let X be a Borel subset of the Cantor set C of additive or
multiplicative class α, and f : X →Y be a continuous function with
compact preimages of points onto Y ⊂C.
If the image f(U) of every clopen set U is the intersection of an open
and a closed set, then Y is a Borel set of the same class.
This result generalizes similar results for open and closed functions.
1. Introduction
Let X be a Borel subset of the Cantor set C of additive or multiplicative
class α, and f : X →Y be a continuous function onto Y ⊂C with compact
preimages of points.
It is well known that if the image f(U) of every clopen set U is an open
subset of Y , then Y is a Borel set of the same class [9], [8], [1], [7].
Analogously, if the image f(U) of every clopen set U is a closed subset of
Y , then Y is a Borel set of the same class.
The aim of this note is to prove (Theorem 2) that if the image f(U) of
every clopen set U is an intersection of an open and a closed set, then Y is
a Borel set of the same class.
This fact is related to the following problem [6, Problem 3.6.]:
Find a class of continuous functions that are the closest possible to open
and closed functions and have compact preimages of points and preserve
abs. Borel class.
2.
Related materials and basic definitions
All spaces in this paper are assumed to be metrizable and separable.
Recall that a subset of a topological space is an LC-set or a locally closed
set if it is the intersection of an open and a closed set.
Given an arbitrary (not necessarily continuous) function f we say that it
is
-open (resp. closed)
if f takes open (resp. closed) sets into open (resp.
closed) sets;
-open(resp. clopen)-LC if f takes open (resp. clopen) sets into LC-sets.
The following assumptions will be needed throughout the paper.
2000 Mathematics Subject Classification. Primary 54C10; Secondary 54H05, 54E40,
03E15.
Key words and phrases.
Borel sets, locally closed sets, clopen sets, open and closed
functions, Borel isomorphism.
1
2
ALEXEY OSTROVSKY
We will denote by S1(y) a sequence with its limit point:
S1(y) = {y} ∪{yi : yi −→y}
.
It is easy to check that a function f is closed ⇔for every S1(y), every
sequence xi ∈f −1(yi) ( yi ̸= yj for i ̸= j) has a limit point in f −1(y);
Indeed, if f is closed and, for some S1(y), there is no limit point in f −1(y)
for xi ∈f −1(yi), then the image f(T) of the closed set T = clX{xi} is not
closed in Y .
Conversely, if, for every S1(y), some sequence xi ∈f −1(yi) has a limit
point in f −1(y) and there is a closed T ⊂X for which f(T) is not closed
in Y , then there is S1(y) such that y ̸∈f(T) and yi ∈f(T). Hence, the
sequence of points xi ∈f −1(yi) ∩T has no limit point in f −1(y).
Analogously, it is easy to check that a function f is open ⇔for every
S1(y) and every open ball O(x), x ∈f −1(y), there are only finitely many yi
such that f −1(yi) ∩O(x) = ∅.
3. Structure of clopen-LC functions in the Cantor set C
Let us first prove the following theorem.
Theorem 1. Let f : X →Y be a clopen-LC function from a subset X of
the Cantor set C onto Y and the inverse image of every point y be com-
pact. Then Y can be covered by countably many subsets Yn such that the
restrictions f|f −1(Yn) are open functions (n = 1, 2, ...) and the restriction
f|f −1(Y0) is a closed function.
Proof. Denote
A. Xn = S{f −1(y) : there is S1(y) ⊂Y and ˜xy ∈C such that there are
xk ∈f −1(yk), where yk −→y , xk −→˜xy and dist(˜xy, f −1(y)) > 1/n.
Lemma 1. The restriction f|Xn is an open function onto Yn = f(Xn).
Indeed, to prove the lemma, let us suppose the opposite. Then
B. for some y ∈f(Xn) and d > 0, there is S1(y) ⊂f(Xn) and x ∈f −1(y)
such that yk −→y and dist(x, f −1(yk)) > d.
Let us consider a countable compact set S2(y) obtained by replacing (see
item B) the isolated points yk of S1(y) by S1(yk) ⊂Y with isolated points
ykj −→yk selected according to item A.
The proof falls naturally into two parts.
Since X lies in C there is a limit point ˜x ∈C for ˜xyk.
(1) If ˜x ̸∈X, then we can take a clopen (in C) ball Oδ1(˜x), δ1 < 1/n, and
a clopen (in C) ball Oδ2(x), where δ2 < d, according to B. It is clear that
D = Oδ1(˜x) ∪Oδ2(x) is a clopen set in C and, hence, S2(y) ∩f(D) is the
intersection of a closed set F and an open set U in S2(y). We can suppose
that S2(y) ∩f(D) contains y, ykj (j, k = 1, 2, ...), and, obviously, yk ̸∈f(D).
PRESERVATION OF THE BOREL CLASS UNDER OPEN-LC FUNCTIONS
3
Since the points ykj are dense in S2(y) and y ∈U, we obtain a contradiction
that yk ∈f(D).
(2) If ˜x ∈X, then we can repeat (1) for D = Oδ1(˜x).
□
Lemma 2. f is a closed function at every point of Y0 = Y \ S
n Yn. Hence,
f|X0 is a closed function onto Y0 = f(X0).
Since the preimages of points are compact, the assertion of the lemma
follows from the definition of the sets Xn in A.
□
4. Preservation of Borel classes by clopen-LC functions in the
Cantor set C
Theorem 2. Let f : X →Y be a cont
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