Great — here’s a clean, structured comparison of the major 1‑dimensional geometries:
- open intervals
- closed intervals
- half‑open intervals
- rays
- circles
We’ll compare them in terms of topology, boundaries, compactness, completeness, connectivity, and manifold structure.
1. Open Interval \((a,b)\)
A standard “segment without endpoints.”
Key Properties
- Endpoints included? No
- Boundary: \(\{a,b\}\) (both missing)
- Interior: whole set
- Compact? No
- Complete? No (Cauchy seq. approaching endpoints don’t converge)
- Connected? Yes
- Manifold structure: 1‑manifold with no boundary
- Homeomorphic to: any other open interval or to \(\mathbb{R}\)
Analogy
Like a string that doesn’t include its ends. Nothing “special” happens at the edges — they simply don’t exist.
2. Closed Interval \([a,b]\)
A full segment with both endpoints included.
Key Properties
- Endpoints included? Both
- Boundary: \(\{a,b\}\) (both present)
- Interior: \((a,b)\)
- Compact? Yes
- Complete? Yes
- Connected? Yes
- Manifold structure: 1‑manifold with boundary points at both ends
- Homeomorphic to: any other closed interval
Analogy
A finite path with two “caps.” You can reach both endpoints.
3. Half‑Open Interval \((a,b]\) (or \([a,b)\))
One endpoint is missing, the other included.
You’ve already dug into this one — here’s the comparison.
Key Properties
- Endpoints included? Only one
- Boundary: \(\{a,b\}\) (one present, one missing)
- Interior: \((a,b)\)
- Compact? No
- Complete? No (incomplete at the missing endpoint)
- Connected? Yes
- Manifold structure: 1‑manifold with boundary at only one side
- Homeomorphic to: any other half‑open interval
Uniqueness
This is the only standard 1‑D geometry that has:
- exactly one present boundary point
- exactly one missing boundary point
No open or closed interval, ray, or circle shares this asymmetry.
4. Rays \((a,\infty)\) or \((-\infty,a]\)
A half‑infinite geometry.
Key Properties
- Endpoints included?
- \((a,\infty)\): neither endpoint (the infinity end doesn’t exist)
- \((-\infty,a]\): one endpoint included
- Boundary: one point (if closed ray), or none (if open ray)
- Interior: the entire ray except at the included endpoint
- Compact? No
- Complete?
- \((a,\infty)\): No (approaching \(a\))
- \((-\infty,a]\): Yes
- Connected? Yes
- Manifold structure: 1‑manifold with or without boundary
- Homeomorphic to:
- open ray \((a,\infty)\) ≅ closed ray \((-\infty,a]\)
- neither is homeomorphic to any finite interval
Analogy
Like a half‑line extending forever in one direction.
Topologically different from finite intervals because it’s “unbounded.”
5. Circle \(S^1\)
A loop with no endpoints.
Key Properties
- Endpoints included? None exist
- Boundary: Empty set
- Interior: The entire circle
- Compact? Yes
- Complete? Yes
- Connected? Yes (and also path connected)
- Manifold structure: 1‑manifold without boundary everywhere
- Homeomorphic to: itself (unique in 1-D)
Uniqueness
Only 1‑D manifold that is:
- compact
- without boundary
- closed loop
It is fundamentally not like any interval or ray.
6. Summary Table
|
1‑D Geometry
|
Included Endpoints
|
Boundary Points
|
Compact?
|
Complete?
|
Manifold Boundary?
|
Homeomorphic To
|
|
\((a,b)\)
|
none
|
\(a,b\)
|
no
|
no
|
none
|
any open interval or \(\mathbb{R}\)
|
|
\([a,b]\)
|
both
|
\(a,b\)
|
yes
|
yes
|
both ends
|
any closed interval
|
|
\((a,b]\)
|
right only
|
\(a,b\)
|
no
|
no
|
one end
|
any half‑open interval
|
|
\((a,\infty)\)
|
none
|
none
|
no
|
no
|
none
|
any open ray
|
|
\((-\infty,a]\)
|
left only
|
\(a\)
|
no
|
yes
|
one end
|
any closed ray
|
|
Circle \(S^1\)
|
N/A
|
none
|
yes
|
yes
|
none
|
itself only
|
7. The big picture: what makes each geometry unique?
Intervals vs Rays
- Intervals are finite; rays are infinite.
- Intervals have two ends; rays have one.
Open vs Closed vs Half‑Open
- Open: missing both endpoints
- Closed: includes both
- Half‑open: exactly one included
This subtle difference in endpoints transforms:
- compactness
- completeness
- manifold boundary structure
Circle vs Everything Else
- Only compact 1‑D shape with no endpoints at all.
- Wraps around completely — no edges to fall off.
If you want to go deeper
I can also explore for you:
- Which of these spaces are homeomorphic to each other? (full classification)
- Which are diffeomorphic?
- How removing points changes their topology
- How they embed in \(\mathbb{R}^2\)
- Analogies to spacetime (boundaries, singularities, incomplete geodesics)
Which direction do you want next?