Nowhere dense set

In mathematics, a subset of a topological space is called nowhere dense[1][2] or rare[3] if its closure has empty interior. In a very loose sense, it is a set whose elements are not tightly clustered (as defined by the topology on the space) anywhere. For example, the integers are nowhere dense among the reals, whereas the interval (0, 1) is not nowhere dense.

A countable union of nowhere dense sets is called a meagre set. Meagre sets play an important role in the formulation of the Baire category theorem, which is used in the proof of several fundamental results of functional analysis.

  1. ^ Bourbaki 1989, ch. IX, section 5.1.
  2. ^ Willard 2004, Problem 4G.
  3. ^ Narici & Beckenstein 2011, section 11.5, pp. 387-389.