For any S \subseteq X of a TVS X, the
convex (resp.
balanced, disked, closed convex, closed balanced, closed disked')
hull of S is the smallest subset of X that has this property and contains S. The closure (respectively, interior,
convex hull, balanced hull, disked hull) of a set S is sometimes denoted by \operatorname{cl}_X S (respectively, \operatorname{Int}_X S, \operatorname{co} S, \operatorname{bal} S, \operatorname{cobal} S). The
convex hull \operatorname{co} S of a subset S is equal to the set of all of elements in S, which are finite
linear combinations of the form t_1 s_1 + \cdots + t_n s_n where n \geq 1 is an integer, s_1, \ldots, s_n \in S and t_1, \ldots, t_n \in [0, 1] sum to 1. The intersection of any family of convex sets is convex and the convex hull of a subset is equal to the intersection of all convex sets that contain it.
Neighborhoods and open sets Properties of neighborhoods and open sets Every TVS is
connected and
locally connected and any connected open subset of a TVS is
arcwise connected. If S \subseteq X and U is an open subset of X then S + U is an open set in X and if S \subseteq X has non-empty interior then S - S is a neighborhood of the origin. The open convex subsets of a TVS X (not necessarily Hausdorff or locally convex) are exactly those that are of the form z + \{x \in X : p(x) for some z \in X and some positive continuous
sublinear functional p on X. If K is an
absorbing disk in a TVS X and if p := p_K is the
Minkowski functional of K then \operatorname{Int}_X K ~\subseteq~ \{x \in X : p(x) where importantly, it was assumed that K had any topological properties nor that p was continuous (which happens if and only if K is a neighborhood of the origin). Let \tau and \nu be two vector topologies on X. Then \tau \subseteq \nu if and only if whenever a net x_{\bull} = \left(x_i\right)_{i \in I} in X converges 0 in (X, \nu) then x_{\bull} \to 0 in (X, \tau). Let \mathcal{N} be a neighborhood basis of the origin in X, let S \subseteq X, and let x \in X. Then x \in \operatorname{cl}_X S if and only if there exists a net s_{\bull} = \left(s_N\right)_{N \in \mathcal{N}} in S (indexed by \mathcal{N}) such that s_{\bull} \to x in X. This shows, in particular, that it will often suffice to consider nets indexed by a neighborhood basis of the origin rather than nets on arbitrary directed sets. If X is a TVS that is of the
second category in itself (that is, a
nonmeager space) then any closed convex
absorbing subset of X is a neighborhood of the origin. This is no longer guaranteed if the set is not convex (a counter-example exists even in X = \R^2) or if X is not of the second category in itself.
Interior If R, S \subseteq X and S has non-empty interior then \operatorname{Int}_X S ~=~ \operatorname{Int}_X \left(\operatorname{cl}_X S\right)~ \text{ and } ~\operatorname{cl}_X S ~=~ \operatorname{cl}_X \left(\operatorname{Int}_X S\right) and \operatorname{Int}_X (R) + \operatorname{Int}_X (S) ~\subseteq~ R + \operatorname{Int}_X S \subseteq \operatorname{Int}_X (R + S). The
topological interior of a
disk is not empty if and only if this interior contains the origin. More generally, if S is a
balanced set with non-empty interior \operatorname{Int}_X S \neq \varnothing in a TVS X then \{0\} \cup \operatorname{Int}_X S will necessarily be balanced; consequently, \operatorname{Int}_X S will be balanced if and only if it contains the origin. For this (i.e. 0 \in \operatorname{Int}_X S) to be true, it suffices for S to also be convex (in addition to being balanced and having non-empty interior).; The conclusion 0 \in \operatorname{Int}_X S could be false if S is not also convex; for example, in X := \R^2, the interior of the closed and balanced set S := \{(x, y) : x y \geq 0\} is \{(x, y) : x y > 0\}. If C is convex and 0 then t \operatorname{Int} C + (1 - t) \operatorname{cl} C ~\subseteq~ \operatorname{Int} C. Explicitly, this means that if C is a convex subset of a TVS X (not necessarily Hausdorff or locally convex), y \in \operatorname{int}_X C, and x \in \operatorname{cl}_X C then the open line segment joining x and y belongs to the interior of C; that is, \{t x + (1 - t) y : 0 If N \subseteq X is any balanced neighborhood of the origin in X then \operatorname{Int}_X N \subseteq B_1 N = \bigcup_{0 where B_1 is the set of all scalars a such that |a| If x belongs to the interior of a convex set S \subseteq X and y \in \operatorname{cl}_X S, then the half-open line segment [x, y) := \{t x + (1 - t) y : 0 and [x, x) = \varnothing \text{ if } x = y. If N is a
balanced neighborhood of 0 in X and B_1 := \{a \in \mathbb{K} : |a| then by considering intersections of the form N \cap \R x (which are convex
symmetric neighborhoods of 0 in the real TVS \R x) it follows that: \operatorname{Int} N = [0, 1) \operatorname{Int} N = (-1, 1) N = B_1 N, and furthermore, if x \in \operatorname{Int} N \text{ and } r := \sup \{r > 0 : [0, r) x \subseteq N\} then r > 1 \text{ and } [0, r) x \subseteq \operatorname{Int} N, and if r \neq \infty then r x \in \operatorname{cl} N \setminus \operatorname{Int} N.
Non-Hausdorff spaces and the closure of the origin A topological vector space X is Hausdorff if and only if \{0\} is a closed subset of X, or equivalently, if and only if \{0\} = \operatorname{cl}_X \{0\}. Because \{0\} is a vector subspace of X, the same is true of its closure \operatorname{cl}_X \{0\}, which is referred to as in X. This vector space satisfies \operatorname{cl}_X \{0\} = \bigcap_{N \in \mathcal{N}(0)} N so that in particular, every neighborhood of the origin in X contains the vector space \operatorname{cl}_X \{0\} as a subset. The
subspace topology on \operatorname{cl}_X \{0\} is always the
trivial topology, which in particular implies that the topological vector space \operatorname{cl}_X \{0\} a
compact space (even if its dimension is non-zero or even infinite) and consequently also a
bounded subset of X. In fact, a vector subspace of a TVS is bounded if and only if it is contained in the closure of \{0\}. Every subset of \operatorname{cl}_X \{0\} also carries the trivial topology and so is itself a compact, and thus also complete,
subspace (see footnote for a proof). In particular, if X is not Hausdorff then there exist subsets that are both but in X; for instance, this will be true of any non-empty proper subset of \operatorname{cl}_X \{0\}. If S \subseteq X is compact, then \operatorname{cl}_X S = S + \operatorname{cl}_X \{0\} and this set is compact. Thus the closure of a compact subset of a TVS is compact (said differently, all compact sets are
relatively compact), which is not guaranteed for arbitrary non-Hausdorff
topological spaces. For every subset S \subseteq X, S + \operatorname{cl}_X \{0\} \subseteq \operatorname{cl}_X S and consequently, if S \subseteq X is open or closed in X then S + \operatorname{cl}_X \{0\} = S (so that this open closed subsets S can be described as a
"tube" whose vertical side is the vector space \operatorname{cl}_X \{0\}). For any subset S \subseteq X of this TVS X, the following are equivalent: • S is
totally bounded. • S + \operatorname{cl}_X \{0\} is totally bounded. • \operatorname{cl}_X S is totally bounded. • The image if S under the canonical quotient map X \to X / \operatorname{cl}_X (\{0\}) is totally bounded. If M is a vector subspace of a TVS X then X / M is Hausdorff if and only if M is closed in X. Moreover, the
quotient map q : X \to X / \operatorname{cl}_X \{0\} is always a
closed map onto the (necessarily) Hausdorff TVS. Every vector subspace of X that is an algebraic complement of \operatorname{cl}_X \{0\} (that is, a vector subspace H that satisfies \{0\} = H \cap \operatorname{cl}_X \{0\} and X = H + \operatorname{cl}_X \{0\}) is a
topological complement of \operatorname{cl}_X \{0\}. Consequently, if H is an algebraic complement of \operatorname{cl}_X \{0\} in X then the addition map H \times \operatorname{cl}_X \{0\} \to X, defined by (h, n) \mapsto h + n is a TVS-isomorphism, where H is necessarily Hausdorff and \operatorname{cl}_X \{0\} has the
indiscrete topology. Moreover, if C is a Hausdorff
completion of H then C \times \operatorname{cl}_X \{0\} is a completion of X \cong H \times \operatorname{cl}_X \{0\}.
Closed and compact sets Compact and totally bounded sets A subset of a TVS is compact if and only if it is complete and
totally bounded. Thus, in a
complete topological vector space, a closed and totally bounded subset is compact. A subset S of a TVS X is
totally bounded if and only if \operatorname{cl}_X S is totally bounded, if and only if its image under the canonical quotient map X \to X / \operatorname{cl}_X (\{0\}) is totally bounded. Every relatively compact set is totally bounded and the closure of a totally bounded set is totally bounded. The image of a totally bounded set under a uniformly continuous map (such as a continuous linear map for instance) is totally bounded. If S is a subset of a TVS X such that every sequence in S has a cluster point in S then S is totally bounded. If K is a compact subset of a TVS X and U is an open subset of X containing K, then there exists a neighborhood N of 0 such that K + N \subseteq U.
Closure and closed set The closure of any convex (respectively, any balanced, any absorbing) subset of any TVS has this same property. In particular, the closure of any convex, balanced, and absorbing subset is a
barrel. The closure of a vector subspace of a TVS is a vector subspace. Every finite dimensional vector subspace of a Hausdorff TVS is closed. The sum of a closed vector subspace and a finite-dimensional vector subspace is closed. If M is a vector subspace of X and N is a closed neighborhood of the origin in X such that U \cap N is closed in X then M is closed in X. The sum of a compact set and a closed set is closed. However, the sum of two closed subsets may fail to be closed (see this footnote for examples). If S \subseteq X and a is a scalar then a \operatorname{cl}_X S \subseteq \operatorname{cl}_X (a S), where if X is Hausdorff, a \neq 0, \text{ or } S = \varnothing then equality holds: \operatorname{cl}_X (a S) = a \operatorname{cl}_X S. In particular, every non-zero scalar multiple of a closed set is closed. If S \subseteq X and if A is a set of scalars such that neither \operatorname{cl} S \text{ nor } \operatorname{cl} A contain zero then \left(\operatorname{cl} A\right) \left(\operatorname{cl}_X S\right) = \operatorname{cl}_X (A S). If S \subseteq X \text{ and } S + S \subseteq 2 \operatorname{cl}_X S then \operatorname{cl}_X S is convex. If R, S \subseteq X then \operatorname{cl}_X (R) + \operatorname{cl}_X (S) ~\subseteq~ \operatorname{cl}_X (R + S)~ \text{ and } ~\operatorname{cl}_X \left[ \operatorname{cl}_X (R) + \operatorname{cl}_X (S) \right] ~=~ \operatorname{cl}_X (R + S) and so consequently, if R + S is closed then so is \operatorname{cl}_X (R) + \operatorname{cl}_X (S). If X is a real TVS and S \subseteq X, then \bigcap_{r > 1} r S \subseteq \operatorname{cl}_X S where the left hand side is independent of the topology on X; moreover, if S is a convex neighborhood of the origin then equality holds. For any subset S \subseteq X, \operatorname{cl}_X S ~=~ \bigcap_{N \in \mathcal{N}} (S + N) where \mathcal{N} is any neighborhood basis at the origin for X. However, \operatorname{cl}_X U ~\supseteq~ \bigcap \{U : S \subseteq U, U \text{ is open in } X\} and it is possible for this containment to be proper (for example, if X = \R and S is the rational numbers). It follows that \operatorname{cl}_X U \subseteq U + U for every neighborhood U of the origin in X.
Closed hulls In a locally convex space, convex hulls of bounded sets are bounded. This is not true for TVSs in general. • The closed convex hull of a set is equal to the closure of the convex hull of that set; that is, equal to \operatorname{cl}_X (\operatorname{co} S). • The closed balanced hull of a set is equal to the closure of the balanced hull of that set; that is, equal to \operatorname{cl}_X (\operatorname{bal} S). • The closed
disked hull of a set is equal to the closure of the disked hull of that set; that is, equal to \operatorname{cl}_X (\operatorname{cobal} S). If R, S \subseteq X and the closed convex hull of one of the sets S or R is compact then \operatorname{cl}_X (\operatorname{co} (R + S)) ~=~ \operatorname{cl}_X (\operatorname{co} R) + \operatorname{cl}_X (\operatorname{co} S). If R, S \subseteq X each have a closed convex hull that is compact (that is, \operatorname{cl}_X (\operatorname{co} R) and \operatorname{cl}_X (\operatorname{co} S) are compact) then \operatorname{cl}_X (\operatorname{co} (R \cup S)) ~=~ \operatorname{co} \left[ \operatorname{cl}_X (\operatorname{co} R) \cup \operatorname{cl}_X (\operatorname{co} S) \right].
Hulls and compactness In a general TVS, the closed convex hull of a compact set may to be compact. The balanced hull of a compact (respectively,
totally bounded) set has that same property. The convex hull of a finite union of compact sets is again compact and convex.
Other properties Meager, nowhere dense, and Baire A
disk in a TVS is not
nowhere dense if and only if its closure is a neighborhood of the origin. A vector subspace of a TVS that is closed but not open is
nowhere dense. Suppose X is a TVS that does not carry the
indiscrete topology. Then X is a
Baire space if and only if X has no balanced absorbing nowhere dense subset. A TVS X is a Baire space if and only if X is
nonmeager, which happens if and only if there does not exist a
nowhere dense set D such that X = \bigcup_{n \in \N} n D. Every
nonmeager locally convex TVS is a
barrelled space.
Important algebraic facts and common misconceptions If S \subseteq X then 2 S \subseteq S + S; if S is convex then equality holds. For an example where equality does hold, let x be non-zero and set S = \{- x, x\}; S = \{x, 2 x\} also works. A subset C is convex if and only if (s + t) C = s C + t C for all positive real s > 0 \text{ and } t > 0, or equivalently, if and only if t C + (1 - t) C \subseteq C for all 0 \leq t \leq 1. The
convex balanced hull of a set S \subseteq X is equal to the convex hull of the
balanced hull of S; that is, it is equal to \operatorname{co} (\operatorname{bal} S). But in general, \operatorname{bal} (\operatorname{co} S) ~\subseteq~ \operatorname{cobal} S ~=~ \operatorname{co} (\operatorname{bal} S), where the inclusion might be strict since the
balanced hull of a convex set need not be convex (counter-examples exist even in \R^2). If R, S \subseteq X and a is a scalar then a(R + S) = aR + a S,~ \text{ and } ~\operatorname{co} (R + S) = \operatorname{co} R + \operatorname{co} S,~ \text{ and } ~\operatorname{co} (a S) = a \operatorname{co} S. If R, S \subseteq X are convex non-empty disjoint sets and x \not\in R \cup S, then S \cap \operatorname{co} (R \cup \{x\}) = \varnothing or R \cap \operatorname{co} (S \cup \{x\}) = \varnothing. In any non-trivial vector space X, there exist two disjoint non-empty convex subsets whose union is X.
Other properties Every TVS topology can be generated by a of
F-seminorms. f : X \to \R is a subadditive function (that is, f(x + y) \leq f(x) + f(y) for all x, y \in X) such as a
sublinear function,
seminorm, or
linear functional, then f is continuous at the origin if and only if it is uniformly continuous on X. If f : X \to \R is a subadditive and satisfies f(0) = 0 then f is continuous if its absolute value |f| : X \to [0, \infty) is continuous. -END:REMOVED INFO--> If P(x) is some unary
predicate (a true or false statement dependent on x \in X) then for any z \in X, z + \{x \in X : P(x)\} = \{x \in X : P(x - z)\}. So for example, if P(x) denotes "\|x\| " then for any z \in X, z + \{x \in X : \|x\| Similarly, if s \neq 0 is a scalar then s \{x \in X : P(x)\} = \left\{x \in X : P\left(\tfrac{1}{s} x\right)\right\}. The elements x \in X of these sets must range over a vector space (that is, over X) rather than not just a subset or else these equalities are no longer guaranteed; similarly, z must belong to this vector space (that is, z \in X).
Properties preserved by set operators • The balanced hull of a compact (respectively,
totally bounded, open) set has that same property. • The
(Minkowski) sum of two compact (respectively, bounded, balanced, convex) sets has that same property. But the sum of two closed sets need be closed. • The convex hull of a balanced (resp. open) set is balanced (respectively, open). However, the convex hull of a closed set need be closed. And the convex hull of a bounded set need be bounded. The following table, the color of each cell indicates whether or not a given property of subsets of X (indicated by the column name, "convex" for instance) is preserved under the set operator (indicated by the row's name, "closure" for instance). If in every TVS, a property is preserved under the indicated set operator then that cell will be colored green; otherwise, it will be colored red. So for instance, since the union of two absorbing sets is again absorbing, the cell in row "R \cup S" and column "Absorbing" is colored green. But since the arbitrary intersection of absorbing sets need not be absorbing, the cell in row "Arbitrary intersections (of at least 1 set)" and column "Absorbing" is colored red. If a cell is not colored then that information has yet to be filled in. ==See also==