In general topology and number theory, branches of mathematics, one can define various topologies on the set of integers or the set of positive integers by taking as a base a suitable collection of arithmetic progressions, sequences of the form or The open sets will then be unions of arithmetic progressions in the collection. Three examples are the Furstenberg topology on , and the Golomb topology and the Kirch topology on . Precise definitions are given below.
Similarly, one-sided arithmetic progressions in are subsets of the form
with and . The intersection of two such arithmetic progressions is either empty, or is another arithmetic progression of the same form:
with equal to the smallest element in the intersection.
This shows that every nonempty intersection of a finite number of arithmetic progressions is again an arithmetic progression. One can then define a topology on or by choosing a collection of arithmetic progressions, declaring all elements of to be open sets, and taking the topology generated by those. If any nonempty intersection of two elements of is again an element of , the collection will be a base for the topology. In general, it will be a subbase for the topology, and the set of all arithmetic progressions that are nonempty finite intersections of elements of will be a base for the topology. Three special cases follow.
The Furstenberg topology,[1] or evenly spaced integer topology,[5] on the set of integers is obtained by taking as a base the collection of all with and
The Golomb topology,[2] or relatively prime integer topology,[6] on the set of positive integers is obtained by taking as a base the collection of all with and and relatively prime.[2] Equivalently,[7] the subcollection of such sets with the extra condition also forms a base for the topology.[6] The corresponding topological space is called the Golomb space.[8]
The Kirch topology,[3] or prime integer topology,[9] on the set of positive integers is obtained by taking as a subbase the collection of all with and prime not dividing [10]
Equivalently,[7] one can take as a subbase the collection of all with prime and .[3][9] A base for the topology consists of all with relatively prime and squarefree (or the same with the additional condition ). The corresponding topological space is called the Kirch space.[10]
The three topologies are related in the sense that every open set in the Kirch topology is open in the Golomb topology, and every open set in the Golomb topology is open in the Furstenberg topology (restricted to the subspace ). On the set , the Kirch topology is coarser than the Golomb topology, which is itself coarser that the Furstenberg topology.
The integers with the Furstenberg topology form a homogeneous space, because it is a topological ring — in some sense, the only topology on for which it is a ring.[15] By contrast, the Golomb space and the Kirch space are topologically rigid — the only self-homeomorphism is the trivial one.[8][10]
Both the Furstenberg and Golomb topologies furnish a proof that there are infinitely many prime numbers.[1][2] A sketch of the proof runs as follows:
Fix a prime p and note that the (positive, in the Golomb space case) integers are a union of finitely many residue classes modulo p. Each residue class is an arithmetic progression, and thus clopen.
Consider the multiples of each prime. These multiples are a residue class (so closed), and the union of these sets is all (Golomb: positive) integers except the units±1.
If there are finitely many primes, that union is a closed set, and so its complement ({±1}) is open.
But every nonempty open set is infinite, so {±1} is not open.
Generalizations
The Furstenberg topology is a special case of the profinite topology on a group. In detail, it is the topology induced by the inclusion , where is the profinite integer ring with its profinite topology.
The notion of an arithmetic progression makes sense in arbitrary -modules, but the construction of a topology on them relies on closure under intersection. Instead, the correct generalization builds a topology out of ideals of a Dedekind domain.[16] This procedure produces a large number of countably infinite, Hausdorff, connected sets, but whether different Dedekind domains can produce homeomorphic topological spaces is a topic of current research.[16][17][18]