Chabauty topology
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In mathematics, the Chabauty topology is a certain topological structure introduced in 1950 by Claude Chabauty, on the set of all closed subgroups of a locally compact group G. It is closely related to the Fell topology on the set of all closed subsets of G and to the Hausdorff distance.
Intuitively, two closed subgroups of G are close in the Chabauty topology if, within any compact subset of G, every point of one subgroup is close to some point of the other, and vice versa. For instance, if is a sequence of positive real numbers, then the sequence of lattices in the additive group converges to
- if with ,
- if ,
- the trivial subgroup if .
Chabauty's original motivation was to study limit groups of lattices in .
We begin by defining a topology on the set of all closed subset of G. This is given by defining a neighbourhood basis for any closed subset X of G. Elements of the neighbourhood basis are given by
where C is any compact subset of G and U is any open neighbourhood U of the identity. The topology determined by this neighbourhood basis is the same as the Fell topology, and the set of closed subgroups of G is a closed subset in this topology. The inherited topology is called the Chabauty topology, and with this topology is called the Chabauty space.