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So we're given a subset B of Rn which is homeomorphic to an open subset of Rn, and we want to show B is open. We've shown every point b in B has an (open) neighborhood U(b) homeomorphic to Rn.
What exactly does it mean for a subset O of Rn to be open? It means that every point in O is contained in an open ball which is contained in O. What we've shown above is that every point in B has an open neighborhood in B homeomorphic to an open ball. This distinction is a subtlety that I'm still not completely clear on.
We can say that the open neighborhood U(b) can be sent via the continuous inclusion map i:B->Rn, and we get some set i(U(b)) in Rn containing b and contained in B. But what does i(U(b)) look like? Dropping the b dependence, consider the restriction iU:U->i(U). This is one-to-one, onto, and continuous. If it's open we're done, but i is not open, in general. It seems clear that this must be a homeomorphism, but I can't find this last piece.
What exactly does it mean for a subset O of Rn to be open? It means that every point in O is contained in an open ball which is contained in O. What we've shown above is that every point in B has an open neighborhood in B homeomorphic to an open ball. This distinction is a subtlety that I'm still not completely clear on.
We can say that the open neighborhood U(b) can be sent via the continuous inclusion map i:B->Rn, and we get some set i(U(b)) in Rn containing b and contained in B. But what does i(U(b)) look like? Dropping the b dependence, consider the restriction iU:U->i(U). This is one-to-one, onto, and continuous. If it's open we're done, but i is not open, in general. It seems clear that this must be a homeomorphism, but I can't find this last piece.