example of pseudometric space
Let X=ℝ2 and consider the function d:X×X to the non-negative real numbers given by
d((x1,x2),(y1,y2))=|x1-y1|. |
Then d(x,x)=|x1-x1|=0, d(x,y)=|x1-y1|=|y1-x1|=d(y,z) and the triangle inequality follows from the triangle inequality on ℝ1, so (X,d) satisfies the defining conditions of a pseudometric space.
Note, however, that this is not an example of a metric space, since we can have two distinct points that are distance 0 from each other, e.g.
d((2,3),(2,5))=|2-2|=0. |
Other examples:
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Let X be a set, x0∈X, and let F(X) be functions X→R. Then d(f,g)=|f(x0)-g(x0)| is a pseudometric on F(X) [1].
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If X is a vector space and p is a seminorm over X, then d(x,y)=p(x-y) is a pseudometric on X.
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The trivial pseudometric d(x,y)=0 for all x,y∈X is a pseudometric.
References
- 1 S. Willard, General Topology, Addison-Wesley, Publishing Company, 1970.
Title | example of pseudometric space |
---|---|
Canonical name | ExampleOfPseudometricSpace |
Date of creation | 2013-03-22 14:40:24 |
Last modified on | 2013-03-22 14:40:24 |
Owner | mathcam (2727) |
Last modified by | mathcam (2727) |
Numerical id | 6 |
Author | mathcam (2727) |
Entry type | Example |
Classification | msc 54E35 |
Related topic | Seminorm |
Related topic | VectorSpace |
Related topic | MetricSpace |
Related topic | Metric |
Defines | trivial pseudometric |