In mathematics, a Rothberger space is a topological space that satisfies a certain a basic selection principle. A Rothberger space is a space in which for every sequence of open covers of the space there are sets such that the family covers the space.

History edit

In 1938, Fritz Rothberger introduced his property known as  .[1]

Characterizations edit

Combinatorial characterization edit

For subsets of the real line, the Rothberger property can be characterized using continuous functions into the Baire space  . A subset   of   is guessable if there is a function   such that the sets   are infinite for all functions  . A subset of the real line is Rothberger iff every continuous image of that space into the Baire space is guessable. In particular, every subset of the real line of cardinality less than  [2] is Rothberger.

Topological game characterization edit

Let   be a topological space. The Rothberger game   played on   is a game with two players Alice and Bob.

1st round: Alice chooses an open cover   of  . Bob chooses a set  .

2nd round: Alice chooses an open cover   of  . Bob chooses a set  .

etc.

If the family   is a cover of the space  , then Bob wins the game  . Otherwise, Alice wins.

A player has a winning strategy if he knows how to play in order to win the game   (formally, a winning strategy is a function).

  • A topological space is Rothberger iff Alice has no winning strategy in the game   played on this space.[3]
  • Let   be a metric space. Bob has a winning strategy in the game   played on the space   iff the space   is countable.[3][4][5]

Properties edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Rothberger, Fritz (1938-01-01). "Eine Verschärfung der Eigenschaft C". Fundamenta Mathematicae (in German). 30 (1): 50–55. doi:10.4064/fm-30-1-50-55. ISSN 0016-2736.
  2. ^ Bartoszynski, Tomek; Judah, Haim (1995-08-15). Set Theory: On the Structure of the Real Line. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9781568810447.
  3. ^ a b Pawlikowski, Janusz. "Undetermined sets of point-open games". Fundamenta Mathematicae. 144 (3). ISSN 0016-2736.
  4. ^ Scheepers, Marion (1995-01-01). "A direct proof of a theorem of Telgársky". Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society. 123 (11): 3483–3485. doi:10.1090/S0002-9939-1995-1273523-1. ISSN 0002-9939.
  5. ^ Telgársky, Rastislav (1984-06-01). "On games of Topsoe". Mathematica Scandinavica. 54: 170–176. doi:10.7146/math.scand.a-12050. ISSN 1903-1807.