×

A useful functor and three famous examples in topology. (English) Zbl 0113.37803


Keywords:

topology
PDFBibTeX XMLCite
Full Text: DOI

References:

[1] R. D. Anderson, Zero-dimensional compact groups of homeomorphisms, Pacific J. Math. 7 (1957), 797 – 810. · Zbl 0079.16603
[2] V. Boltyanskiĭ, An example of a two-dimensional compactum whose topological square is three-dimensional, Amer. Math. Soc. Translation 1951 (1951), no. 48, 3 – 6.
[3] P. E. Conner and E. E. Floyd, Fixed point free involutions and equivariant maps, Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 66 (1960), 416 – 441. · Zbl 0106.16301
[4] Hurewicz and Wallman, Dimension theory, Princeton Univ. Press, Princeton, N. J., revised edition, 1948. · Zbl 0036.12501
[5] A. Kolmogoroff, Über offene Abbildungen, Ann. of Math. (2) 38 (1937), 36-38. · Zbl 0016.08105
[6] L. Pontrjagin, Sur un hypothèse fondamental de la théorie de la dimension, C. R. Acad. Sci. Paris 130 (1930), 1405-1407. · JFM 56.0503.01
[7] Frank Raymond and R. F. Williams, Examples of \?-adic transformation groups, Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 66 (1960), 392 – 394. · Zbl 0096.17202
[8] -, Examples of p-adic transformation groups, (to appear). · Zbl 0096.17202
[9] Chung-Tao Yang, Continuous functions from spheres to euclidean spaces, Ann of Math. (2) 62 (1955), 284 – 292. · Zbl 0067.15203 · doi:10.2307/1969682
This reference list is based on information provided by the publisher or from digital mathematics libraries. Its items are heuristically matched to zbMATH identifiers and may contain data conversion errors. In some cases that data have been complemented/enhanced by data from zbMATH Open. This attempts to reflect the references listed in the original paper as accurately as possible without claiming completeness or a perfect matching.