On densely complete metric spaces and extensions of uniformly continuous functions in ZF

Abstract

A metric space X is called densely complete if there exists a dense set D in X such that every Cauchy sequence of points of D converges in X. One of the main aims of this work is to prove that the countable axiom of choice, CAC for abbreviation, is equivalent with the following statements: (i) Every densely complete (connected) metric space X is complete.\ (ii) For every pair of metric spaces X and Y, if % Y is complete and S is a dense subspace of X% , while f:S→ Y is a uniformly continuous function, then there exists a uniformly continuous extension F:X% Y of f. (iii) Complete subspaces of metric spaces have complete closures. (iv) Complete subspaces of metric spaces are closed. It is also shown that the restriction of (i) to subsets of the real line is equivalent to the restriction CAC(R) of CAC to subsets of R. However, the restriction of (ii) to subsets of % R is strictly weaker than CAC(R) because it is equivalent with the statement that R is sequential. Moreover, among other relevant results, it is proved that, for every positive integer % n, the space Rn is sequential if and only if R is sequential. It is also shown that R×Q is not densely complete if and only if CAC(R) holds.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…