Neha Patil (Editor)

Lebesgue's number lemma

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In topology, Lebesgue's number lemma, named after Henri Lebesgue, is a useful tool in the study of compact metric spaces. It states:

If the metric space ( X , d ) is compact and an open cover of X is given, then there exists a number δ > 0 such that every subset of X having diameter less than δ is contained in some member of the cover.

Such a number δ is called a Lebesgue number of this cover. The notion of a Lebesgue number itself is useful in other applications as well.

Proof

Let U be an open cover of X . Since X is compact we can extract a finite subcover { A 1 , , A n } U .

For each i { 1 , , n } , let C i := X A i and define a function f : X R by f ( x ) := 1 n i = 1 n d ( x , C i ) .

Since f is continuous on a compact set, it attains a minimum δ . The key observation is that δ > 0 . If Y is a subset of X of diameter less than δ , then there exist x 0 X such that Y B δ ( x 0 ) , where B δ ( x 0 ) denotes the ball of radius δ centered at x 0 (namely, one can choose as x 0 any point in Y ). Since f ( x 0 ) δ there must exist at least one i such that d ( x 0 , C i ) δ . But this means that B δ ( x 0 ) A i and so, in particular, Y A i .

References

Lebesgue's number lemma Wikipedia


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