Consider the
real line \R with the usual topology (that is, the topology whose
basis sets are
open intervals) and \Q, the subset of
rational numbers (whose
topological interior in \R is empty). Then in \R we have • \partial (0,5) = \partial [0,5) = \partial (0,5] = \partial [0,5] = \{0, 5\} • \partial \varnothing= \varnothing • \partial \Q = \R • \partial (\Q \cap [0, 1]) = [0, 1] These last two examples illustrate the fact that the boundary of a
dense set with empty interior is its closure. They also show that it is possible for the boundary \partial S of a subset S to contain a non-empty open subset of X := \R; that is, for the interior of \partial S in X to be non-empty. However, a subset's boundary always has an empty interior. The notation \partial_X S is used because the boundary of a set S crucially depends on the surrounding topological space X that's considered. Take for instance the set S = \{r\in\Q\mid 0. Considered as a subset of \R, its boundary is the
closed interval [0,\sqrt 2]; considered as a subset of \Q (where \Q is given its usual topology, the
subspace topology inherited from \R), the boundary of S is \{0\}; and considered as a subset of X=S itself, its boundary is empty. Given the usual topology on \R^2, the boundary of a closed disk \Omega = \left\{(x, y) : x^2 + y^2 \leq 1 \right\} is the disk's surrounding circle: \partial \Omega = \left\{(x, y) : x^2 + y^2 = 1 \right\}. If the disk is instead viewed as a set in \R^3 with its own usual topology, that is, \Omega = \left\{(x, y, 0) : x^2 + y^2 \leq 1 \right\}, then the boundary of the disk is the disk itself: \partial \Omega = \Omega. == Properties ==