Abstract

In 2005 Kawamura and Rambla, independently, constructed a metric counterexample to Wood's Conjecture from 1982. We exhibit a new nonmetric counterexample of a space Lˆ, such that C0(Lˆ,C) is almost transitive, and show that it is distinct from a nonmetric space whose existence follows from the work of Greim and Rajagopalan in 1997. Up to our knowledge, this is only the third known counterexample to Wood's Conjecture. We also show that, contrary to what was expected, if a one-point compactification of a space X is R.H. Bing's pseudo-circle then C0(X,C) is not almost transitive, for a generic choice of points. Finally, we point out close relation of these results on Wood's conjecture to a work of Irwin and Solecki on projective Fraïssé limits and projective homogeneity of the pseudo-arc and, addressing their conjecture, we show that the pseudo-circle is not approximately projectively homogeneous.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call