pointed set
0.1 Definition
A pointed set is an ordered pair (A,a) such that A is a set and a∈A. The element a is called the basepoint of (A,a). At first glance, it seems appropriate enough to call any non-empty set a pointed set. However, the basepoint plays an important role in that if we select a different element a′∈A, the ordered pair (A,a′) forms a different pointed set from (A,a). In fact, given any non-empty set A with n elements, n pointed sets can be formed from A.
A function f between two pointed sets (A,a) and (B,b) is just a function from A to B such that f(a)=b. Whereas there are |B|∣A∣ functions from A to B, only |B|∣A∣-1 of them are from (A,a) to (B,b).
Pointed sets are mainly used as illustrative examples in the study of universal algebra as algebras
with a single constant operator. This operator takes every element in the algebra to a unique constant, which is clearly the basepoint in our definition above. Any homomorphism
(http://planetmath.org/HomomorphismBetweenAlgebraicSystems) between two algebras preserves basepoints (taking the basepoint of the domain algebra to the basepoint of the codomain algebra).
From the above discussion, we see that a pointed set can alternatively described as any constant function p where the its domain is the underlying set, and its range consists of a single element p0∈dom(p). A function f from one pointed set p to another pointed set q can be seen as a function from the domain of p to the domain of q such that the following diagram commutes:
\xymatrixdom(p)\ar[r]f\ar[d]p&dom(q)\ar[d]q{p0}\ar[r]c&{q0} |
0.2 Creation of Pointed Sets from Existing Ones
Pointed Subsets. Given a pointed set (A,a), a pointed subset of (A,a) is an ordered pair (A′,a), where A′ is a subset of A. A pointed subset is clearly a pointed set.
Products of Pointed Sets. Given two pointed sets (A,a) and (B,b), their product is defined to be the ordered pair (A×B,(a,b)). More generally, given a family of pointed sets (Ai,ai) indexed by I, we can form their Cartesian product to be the ordered pair (∏Ai,(ai)). Both the finite and the arbitrary cases produce pointed sets.
Quotients. Given a pointed set (A,a) and an equivalence relation
R defined on A. For each x∈A, define ˉx:=. Then is a subset of the power set
of , called the quotient of by . Then is a pointed set.
Title | pointed set |
---|---|
Canonical name | PointedSet |
Date of creation | 2013-03-22 15:55:42 |
Last modified on | 2013-03-22 15:55:42 |
Owner | CWoo (3771) |
Last modified by | CWoo (3771) |
Numerical id | 10 |
Author | CWoo (3771) |
Entry type | Definition |
Classification | msc 03E20 |
Synonym | base point |
Synonym | base-point |
Defines | basepoint |
Defines | pointed subset |