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Let (X,T) be a topological space, and let
.
Let
be a cardinal number. We say that A
is of order less than equal to
in X, written
ord(A,X)
, provided that for each
such
that
, there exists
such that
and
.
We say that A is of order
in X, written
ord(A,X)
, provided that ord(A,X)
and
ord(A,X)
for any cardinal number
.
A concept of an order of a point p in a continuum X (in
the sense of Menger-Urysohn), written
, is defined as follows.
Let
stand for a cardinal number. We write:
provided that for every
there is an
open neighborhood U of p such that
and
;
provided that
and
for each cardinal number
the condition
does not hold;
provided that the point p has arbitrarily small open
neighborhoods U with finite boundaries
and
is not bounded by
any
.
Thus, for any continuum X we have
(convention:
); see [55, §51, I, p. 274].
Let a dendroid
X and a point
be given. Then p is said to be a
point of order at least
in the classical sense
provided that p is
the center of an
-od contained in X. We say that p is a
point of order
in the classical sense provided that
is the minimum cardinality for which the above condition is
satisfied (see [8, p. 229]).
Next: order preserving mapping
Up: Definitions
Previous: orbit
Janusz J. Charatonik, Pawel Krupski and Pavel Pyrih
2001-02-21