An integral invariant
defined as follows.
if and only if
.
A non-empty topological space
is said to be at most
-dimensional,
written as
,
if in any finite open covering of
one can inscribe a finite open covering of
of multiplicity
,
.
If
for some
then
is said to be
finite-dimensional,
written as
,
and one defines
Here if

,
then the space is called

-dimensional.
The concept of the dimension of a topological
space generalizes the elementary geometrical concept of the number
of coordinates of a Euclidean space (and a polyhedron), since the dimension of an

-dimensional
Euclidean space (and any

-dimensional
polyhedron) is equal to

(the
Lebesgue–Brouwer theorem).
The importance of the concept of the dimension of a topological space is revealed by the
Nöbeling–Pontryagin–Hurewicz–Kuratowski theorem:
An
-dimensional
metrizable space with a countable base can be imbedded in the
-dimensional
Euclidean space. Thus, the class of spaces that
are topologically equivalent to subspaces of all possible
-dimensional
Euclidean spaces,
coincides with the class of finite-dimensional metrizable spaces with a countable base.
The dimension
is sometimes called the
Lebesgue dimension,
since its definition arises from
Lebesgue's theorem on tilings:
An
-dimensional
cube has, for any
,
a finite closed covering of multiplicity
such that all elements have diameter
;
there exists an
for which the multiplicity of any finite closed covering of an
-dimensional
cube is
if the diameters of the elements of this covering are
.
Another, inductive, approach (see
Inductive dimension)
to the definition of the dimension of a topological space is possible,
based on the separation of the space by subspaces of
smaller dimension. This approach to the concept of dimension
originates from
H. Poincaré,
L.E.J. Brouwer,
P.S. Urysohn,
and
K. Menger.
In the case of metrizable spaces it is equivalent to Lebesgue's definition.
The foundations of dimension theory were laid in the first half
of the twenties of the
20th century
in papers of Urysohn
and Menger. In the later thirties, the dimension theory of metrizable
spaces with a countable base was constructed, and by the
start of the sixties the dimension theory of arbitrary metrizable spaces was finished.
Below, all topological spaces under consideration are
supposed to be normal and Hausdorff (cf.
Hausdorff space;
Normal space).
In this case, in the definition of dimension one
can without harm replace the open coverings to be inscribed by closed ones.
Lebesgue's approach to the definition of dimension (in contrast to
the inductive approach) makes it possible to geometrize the concept
of dimension for any space by comparing the original
topological space with most simple geometrical formations — polyhedra (cf.
Polyhedron).
Roughly speaking, a space is
-dimensional
if and only if it differs arbitrarily little from an
-dimensional
polyhedron. More precisely, there is
Aleksandrov's theorem on
-mappings:
if and only if for any finite open covering
of
there is an
-mapping
from
onto an at most
-dimensional,
(compact) polyhedron. This theorem can be
particularly visualized for compacta: A compactum
has
if and only if for any
there is an
-mapping
from
onto an at most
-dimensional
polyhedron. If
also lies in a Euclidean or Hilbert space, then the
-mapping
can be replaced by an
-shift
(Aleksandrov's theorem on
-mappings and
-shifts).
The following statement makes it possible to determine the dimension
of a space by comparing it with all possible
-dimensional
cubes:
if and only if the space has an
essential mapping
onto an
-dimensional
cube,
(Aleksandrov's theorem on essential mappings).
This theorem can be given the following form:
if and only if, for any set
closed in
and for any continuous mapping
into the
-dimensional
sphere, there is a continuous extension
,
of
.
The following characterization of dimension indicates the role of this
concept in problems of the existence of solutions to systems of equations:
,
if and only if
has a system of disjoint pairs of closed sets
,
,
,
such that for any functions
continuous on
and satisfying the conditions
,
,
,
there is a point
at which
,
(this is the
Otto–Eilenberg–Hemmingsen theorem on partitions).
One of the most important properties of dimension is expressed by the
Menger–Urysohn–Čech countable closed sum theorem:
If the space
is a finite or countable sum of closed subsets of dimension
,
then also
,
.
In this theorem, the condition that the sum be finite or countable
may be replaced by the condition of local finiteness. The statement
for the large and small inductive dimensions analogous to this sum
theorem already fails in the class of Hausdorff compacta. The
following statements are among the fundamental general facts of dimension
theory, and make it possible to reduce the consideration of arbitrary
spaces to that of Hausdorff compacta. For any normal space
a)
,
,
where
is the
Stone–Čech compactification
of
;
at the same time, the inequality
is possible;
b) there exists a compactification
of
with weight (cf.
Weight of a topological space)
equal to the weight
and with dimension
equal to the dimension
;
the analogous statement also holds for the large inductive dimension. The
case of a countable weight of the space is
especially interesting, since in this case the extension
is metrizable.
Statement b) can be strengthened: For any
and any infinite cardinal number
there is a Hausdorff compactum
of weight
and dimension
containing a homeomorphic image of every normal space
of weight
and dimension
(the
theorem on the universal Hausdorff compactum of given weight and dimension).
The analogous statement also holds for the large inductive dimension. Here for
one can take the perfect Cantor set, and as
the Menger universal curve.
It would seem that dimension should possess the monotonicity property:
if
.
This is so if a) the set
is closed in
or is strongly paracompact; or b) the space
is metrizable (and even perfectly normal). However, already for a subset
of a hereditarily normal space
one may have
and
.
But always
for
.
One of the main problems in dimension theory is the
behaviour of dimension under continuous mappings. In the case
of closed mappings (these also include all continuous mappings of
Hausdorff compacta) the answer is given by the formulas of
W. Hurewicz,
which he originally obtained for the class of spaces with a countable base.
Hurewicz' formula for mappings raising the dimension:
If a mapping
is continuous and closed, then
where

is the
multiplicity
of

.
Hurewicz' formula for mappings lowering the dimension:
For a continuous closed mapping
onto a paracompactum
,
the inequality
holds, where
For an arbitrary normal space

this formula is, in general, false.
In the case of continuous mappings of finite-dimensional compacta,
it has been established that a continuous mapping
of dimension
is a superposition of
continuous mappings of dimension 1 (this is a precization of
formula
(1),
and an analogue of the fact that a
-dimensional
cube is the product of
intervals).
In the case of open mappings one can show that the
image of a zero-dimensional Hausdorff compactum is zero-dimensional and, at the
same time, that the Hilbert cube is the image
of a one-dimensional compactum, even if the corresponding mapping
has dimension
equal to zero. However, in the case of an open mapping
of Hausdorff compacta
and
with multiplicity
,
the equality
holds.
The behaviour of dimension under topological products
is described by the following assertions:
a) there exist finite-dimensional compacta
and
for which
;
b) if one of the factors of the product
is a Hausdorff compactum or metrizable, then
;
c) there exist normal spaces
and
for which
.
In the case of Hausdorff compacta
and
one always has
if
and
,
but one may have
.
If, however, the Hausdorff compacta
and
are perfectly normal or one-dimensional, then
.
Dimension theory is most meaningful, first, for the class of metric
spaces with a countable base, and, secondly, for the class of all
metric spaces. In the class of metric spaces with a countable base one has the
Urysohn equalities
In the class of arbitrary metric spaces one has the
Katětov equality
and

is possible.
In the case of metric spaces the concept of an
-dimensional
space can be reduced to the concept of a zero-dimensional
space by the following two methods. For a metric space
,
,
if and only if
a)
can be represented by at most
zero-dimensional summands; or
b) there exists a continuous closed mapping of multiplicity
from a zero-dimensional metric space onto
.
For any subset
of a metric space
there is a subset
of type
in
for which
.
In the class of metric spaces of weight
and dimension
there exists a universal space (in the sense of imbedding).
Dowker's theorem
has played an important role in the dimension theory of metric (and more general) spaces:
if and only if in any locally finite open covering of
one can inscribe an open covering of multiplicity
.
One of the most important problems in dimension theory is the
problem of the relations between the Lebesgue dimension and
the inductive dimensions. Although for an arbitrary space
the values of the dimensions
,
,
are, in general, pairwise distinct, for some classes of spaces
that are in some sense close to metric spaces one has, e.g., the following:
a) if the space
admits a continuous closed mapping
of dimension
onto a metric space, then
(3)
holds, whence follow the equalities
(2)
for locally compact Hausdorff groups and their quotient spaces;
b) if there exists a continuous closed mapping from a metric space onto
,
then
(2)
holds.
One more general condition for equality
(3)
to hold for a paracompactum
is as follows:
and
is the image of a zero-dimensional space under a closed mapping of multiplicity
,
.
In the case of an arbitrary space
one always has the inequalities
and
,
while the equalities
and
are equivalent. For a strongly paracompact (in particular,
for a Hausdorff compact or Lindelöf compact) space
one has the inequality
.
For Hausdorff compacta the equalities
and
are equivalent. There exist Hausdorff compacta satisfying the first axiom of countability
(and even perfectly-normal Hausdorff compacta, if one
assumes the continuum hypothesis), for which
and
,
.
An example of a topologically homogeneous Hausdorff compactum with
has been constructed. For perfectly-normal Hausdorff compacta one always has
.
There exist Hausdorff compacta, satisfying even the
first axiom of countability, for which
.
It is not known
(1983)
whether there exists an
such that for every
there is a Hausdorff compactum (a metric space)
with
,
.
In the case of non-metrizable spaces, the dimension may not only
fail to be monotone, but it also has other pathological properties. For any
an example of a Hausdorff compactum
in which any closed set has dimension either 0 or
has been constructed. An analogous example for the
inductive dimension is impossible. Also, for each
an example of a Hausdorff compactum
for which any closed set separating
has dimension
has been constructed. Thus, the approach to the definition
of dimension in the case of a non-metrizable space
differs in principle from the inductive approach of Poincaré
based on the separation of the space by spaces
of a smaller number of coordinates. The Hausdorff compacta
are directly related to the following statement: Any
-dimensional
Hausdorff compactum contains an
-dimensional
Cantor manifold.
A subset of an
-dimensional
Euclidean space
is
-dimensional
if and only if it contains interior points with respect to
.
A compactum has dimension
if and only if it has a mapping of dimension zero into
,
hence, up to zero-dimensional mappings,
-dimensional
compacta are indistinguishable from the bounded closed subsets of
containing interior points (with respect to
).
See also
Dimension theory.