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Filters in topology

The power set lattice of the set with the upper set colored dark green. It is a filter, and even a principal filter. It is not an ultrafilter, as it can be extended to the larger nontrivial filter by including also the light green elements. Because cannot be extended any further, it is an ultrafilter.

Filters in topology, a subfield of mathematics, can be used to study topological spaces and define all basic topological notions such as convergence, continuity, compactness, and more. Filters, which are special families of subsets of some given set, also provide a common framework for defining various types of limits of functions such as limits from the left/right, to infinity, to a point or a set, and many others. Special types of filters called ultrafilters have many useful technical properties and they may often be used in place of arbitrary filters.

Filters have generalizations called prefilters (also known as filter bases) and filter subbases, all of which appear naturally and repeatedly throughout topology. Examples include neighborhood filters/bases/subbases and uniformities. Every filter is a prefilter and both are filter subbases. Every prefilter and filter subbase is contained in a unique smallest filter, which they are said to generate. This establishes a relationship between filters and prefilters that may often be exploited to allow one to use whichever of these two notions is more technically convenient. There is a certain preorder on families of sets, denoted by that helps to determine exactly when and how one notion (filter, prefilter, etc.) can or cannot be used in place of another. This preorder's importance is amplified by the fact that it also defines the notion of filter convergence, where by definition, a filter (or prefilter) converges to a point if and only if where is that point's neighborhood filter. Consequently, subordination also plays an important role in many concepts that are related to convergence, such as cluster points and limits of functions. In addition, the relation which denotes and is expressed by saying that is subordinate to also establishes a relationship in which is to as a subsequence is to a sequence (that is, the relation which is called subordination, is for filters the analog of "is a subsequence of").

Filters were introduced by Henri Cartan in 1937[1] and subsequently used by Bourbaki in their book Topologie Générale as an alternative to the similar notion of a net developed in 1922 by E. H. Moore and H. L. Smith. Filters can also be used to characterize the notions of sequence and net convergence. But unlike[note 1] sequence and net convergence, filter convergence is defined entirely in terms of subsets of the topological space and so it provides a notion of convergence that is completely intrinsic to the topological space; indeed, the category of topological spaces can be equivalently defined entirely in terms of filters. Every net induces a canonical filter and dually, every filter induces a canonical net, where this induced net (resp. induced filter) converges to a point if and only if the same is true of the original filter (resp. net). This characterization also holds for many other definitions such as cluster points. These relationships make it possible to switch between filters and nets, and they often also allow one to choose whichever of these two notions (filter or net) is more convenient for the problem at hand. However, assuming that "subnet" is defined using either of its most popular definitions (which are those given by Willard and by Kelley), then in general, this relationship does not extend to subordinate filters and subnets because as detailed below, there exist subordinate filters whose filter/subordinate–filter relationship cannot be described in terms of the corresponding net/subnet relationship; this issue can however be resolved by using a less commonly encountered definition of "subnet", which is that of an AA–subnet.

Thus filters/prefilters and this single preorder provide a framework that seamlessly ties together fundamental topological concepts such as topological spaces (via neighborhood filters), neighborhood bases, convergence, various limits of functions, continuity, compactness, sequences (via sequential filters), the filter equivalent of "subsequence" (subordination), uniform spaces, and more; concepts that otherwise seem relatively disparate and whose relationships are less clear.

Motivation edit

Archetypical example of a filter

The archetypical example of a filter is the neighborhood filter at a point in a topological space which is the family of sets consisting of all neighborhoods of By definition, a neighborhood of some given point is any subset whose topological interior contains this point; that is, such that Importantly, neighborhoods are not required to be open sets; those are called open neighborhoods. Listed below are those fundamental properties of neighborhood filters that ultimately became the definition of a "filter." A filter on is a set of subsets of that satisfies all of the following conditions:

  1. Not empty:    –  just as since is always a neighborhood of (and of anything else that it contains);
  2. Does not contain the empty set:    –  just as no neighborhood of is empty;
  3. Closed under finite intersections:   If  –  just as the intersection of any two neighborhoods of is again a neighborhood of ;
  4. Upward closed:   If then  –  just as any subset of that contains a neighborhood of will necessarily be a neighborhood of (this follows from and the definition of "a neighborhood of ").

Generalizing sequence convergence by using sets − determining sequence convergence without the sequence

A sequence in is by definition a map from the natural numbers into the space The original notion of convergence in a topological space was that of a sequence converging to some given point in a space, such as a metric space. With metrizable spaces (or more generally first–countable spaces or Fréchet–Urysohn spaces), sequences usually suffices to characterize, or "describe", most topological properties, such as the closures of subsets or continuity of functions. But there are many spaces where sequences can not be used to describe even basic topological properties like closure or continuity. This failure of sequences was the motivation for defining notions such as nets and filters, which never fail to characterize topological properties.

Nets directly generalize the notion of a sequence since nets are, by definition, maps from an arbitrary directed set into the space A sequence is just a net whose domain is with the natural ordering. Nets have their own notion of convergence, which is a direct generalization of sequence convergence.

Filters generalize sequence convergence in a different way by considering only the values of a sequence. To see how this is done, consider a sequence which is by definition just a function whose value at is denoted by rather than by the usual parentheses notation that is commonly used for arbitrary functions. Knowing only the image (sometimes called "the range") of the sequence is not enough to characterize its convergence; multiple sets are needed. It turns out that the needed sets are the following,[note 2] which are called the tails of the sequence :

These sets completely determine this sequence's convergence (or non–convergence) because given any point, this sequence converges to it if and only if for every neighborhood (of this point), there is some integer such that contains all of the points This can be reworded as:

     every neighborhood must contain some set of the form as a subset.

Or more briefly: every neighborhood must contain some tail as a subset. It is this characterization that can be used with the above family of tails to determine convergence (or non–convergence) of the sequence Specifically, with the family of sets in hand, the function is no longer needed to determine convergence of this sequence (no matter what topology is placed on ). By generalizing this observation, the notion of "convergence" can be extended from sequences/functions to families of sets.

The above set of tails of a sequence is in general not a filter but it does "generate" a filter via taking its upward closure (which consists of all supersets of all tails). The same is true of other important families of sets such as any neighborhood basis at a given point, which in general is also not a filter but does generate a filter via its upward closure (in particular, it generates the neighborhood filter at that point). The properties that these families share led to the notion of a filter base, also called a prefilter, which by definition is any family having the minimal properties necessary and sufficient for it to generate a filter via taking its upward closure.

Nets versus filters − advantages and disadvantages

Filters and nets each have their own advantages and drawbacks and there's no reason to use one notion exclusively over the other.[note 3] Depending on what is being proved, a proof may be made significantly easier by using one of these notions instead of the other.[2] Both filters and nets can be used to completely characterize any given topology. Nets are direct generalizations of sequences and can often be used similarly to sequences, so the learning curve for nets is typically much less steep than that for filters. However, filters, and especially ultrafilters, have many more uses outside of topology, such as in set theory, mathematical logic, model theory (ultraproducts, for example), abstract algebra,[3] combinatorics,[4] dynamics,[4] order theory, generalized convergence spaces, Cauchy spaces, and in the definition and use of hyperreal numbers.

Like sequences, nets are functions and so they have the advantages of functions. For example, like sequences, nets can be "plugged into" other functions, where "plugging in" is just function composition. Theorems related to functions and function composition may then be applied to nets. One example is the universal property of inverse limits, which is defined in terms of composition of functions rather than sets and it is more readily applied to functions like nets than to sets like filters (a prominent example of an inverse limit is the Cartesian product). Filters may be awkward to use in certain situations, such as when switching between a filter on a space and a filter on a dense subspace [5]

In contrast to nets, filters (and prefilters) are families of sets and so they have the advantages of sets. For example, if is surjective then the image under of an arbitrary filter or prefilter is both easily defined and guaranteed to be a prefilter on 's domain, whereas it is less clear how to pullback (unambiguously/without choice) an arbitrary sequence (or net) so as to obtain a sequence or net in the domain (unless is also injective and consequently a bijection, which is a stringent requirement). Similarly, the intersection of any collection of filters is once again a filter whereas it is not clear what this could mean for sequences or nets. Because filters are composed of subsets of the very topological space that is under consideration, topological set operations (such as closure or interior) may be applied to the sets that constitute the filter. Taking the closure of all the sets in a filter is sometimes useful in functional analysis for instance. Theorems and results about images or preimages of sets under a function may also be applied to the sets that constitute a filter; an example of such a result might be one of continuity's characterizations in terms of preimages of open/closed sets or in terms of the interior/closure operators. Special types of filters called ultrafilters have many useful properties that can significantly help in proving results. One downside of nets is their dependence on the directed sets that constitute their domains, which in general may be entirely unrelated to the space In fact, the class of nets in a given set is too large to even be a set (it is a proper class); this is because nets in can have domains of any cardinality. In contrast, the collection of all filters (and of all prefilters) on is a set whose cardinality is no larger than that of Similar to a topology on a filter on is "intrinsic to " in the sense that both structures consist entirely of subsets of and neither definition requires any set that cannot be constructed from (such as or other directed sets, which sequences and nets require).

Preliminaries, notation, and basic notions edit

In this article, upper case Roman letters like denote sets (but not families unless indicated otherwise) and will denote the power set of A subset of a power set is called a family of sets (or simply, a family) where it is over if it is a subset of Families of sets will be denoted by upper case calligraphy letters such as Whenever these assumptions are needed, then it should be assumed that is non–empty and that etc. are families of sets over

The terms "prefilter" and "filter base" are synonyms and will be used interchangeably.

Warning about competing definitions and notation

There are unfortunately several terms in the theory of filters that are defined differently by different authors. These include some of the most important terms such as "filter." While different definitions of the same term usually have significant overlap, due to the very technical nature of filters (and point–set topology), these differences in definitions nevertheless often have important consequences. When reading mathematical literature, it is recommended that readers check how the terminology related to filters is defined by the author. For this reason, this article will clearly state all definitions as they are used. Unfortunately, not all notation related to filters is well established and some notation varies greatly across the literature (for example, the notation for the set of all prefilters on a set) so in such cases this article uses whatever notation is most self describing or easily remembered.

The theory of filters and prefilters is well developed and has a plethora of definitions and notations, many of which are now unceremoniously listed to prevent this article from becoming prolix and to allow for the easy look up of notation and definitions. Their important properties are described later.

Sets operations

The upward closure or isotonization in [6][7] of a family of sets is

and similarly the downward closure of is

Notation and Definition Name
Kernel of [7]
Dual of where is a set.[8]
Trace of [8] or the restriction of where is a set; sometimes denoted by
[9] Elementwise (set) intersection ( will denote the usual intersection)
[9] Elementwise (set) union ( will denote the usual union)
Elementwise (set) subtraction ( will denote the usual set subtraction)
Power set of a set [7]

For any two families declare that if and only if for every there exists some in which case it is said that is coarser than and that is finer than (or subordinate to) [10][11][12] The notation may also be used in place of

If and then are said to be equivalent (with respect to subordination).

Two families mesh,[8] written if

Throughout, is a map.

Notation and Definition Name
[13] Image of or the preimage of under
[14] Image of under
Image (or range) of

Topology notation

Denote the set of all topologies on a set Suppose is any subset, and is any point.

Notation and Definition Name
Set or prefilter[note 4] of open neighborhoods of
Set or prefilter of open neighborhoods of
Set or filter[note 4] of neighborhoods of
Set or filter of neighborhoods of

If then

Nets and their tails

A directed set is a set together with a preorder, which will be denoted by (unless explicitly indicated otherwise), that makes into an (upward) directed set;[15] this means that for all there exists some such that For any indices the notation is defined to mean while is defined to mean that holds but it is not true that (if is antisymmetric then this is equivalent to ).

A net in [15] is a map from a non–empty directed set into The notation will be used to denote a net with domain

Notation and Definition Name
Tail or section of starting at where is a directed set.
Tail or section of starting at
Set or prefilter of tails/sections of Also called the eventuality filter base generated by (the tails of) If is a sequence then is also called the sequential filter base.[16]
(Eventuality) filter of/generated by (tails of) [16]
Tail or section of a net starting at [16] where is a directed set.

Warning about using strict comparison

If is a net and then it is possible for the set which is called the tail of after , to be empty (for example, this happens if is an upper bound of the directed set ). In this case, the family would contain the empty set, which would prevent it from being a prefilter (defined later). This is the (important) reason for defining as rather than or even and it is for this reason that in general, when dealing with the prefilter of tails of a net, the strict inequality may not be used interchangeably with the inequality

Filters and prefilters edit

The following is a list of properties that a family of sets may possess and they form the defining properties of filters, prefilters, and filter subbases. Whenever it is necessary, it should be assumed that

The family of sets is:
  1. Proper or nondegenerate if Otherwise, if then it is called improper[17] or degenerate.
  2. Directed downward[15] if whenever then there exists some such that
    • This property can be characterized in terms of directedness, which explains the word "directed": A binary relation on is called (upward) directed if for any two there is some satisfying Using in place of gives the definition of directed downward whereas using instead gives the definition of directed upward. Explicitly, is directed downward (resp. directed upward) if and only if for all there exists some "greater" such that (resp. such that ) − where the "greater" element is always on the right hand side, − which can be rewritten as (resp. as ).
  3. Closed under finite intersections (resp. unions) if the intersection (resp. union) of any two elements of is an element of
    • If is closed under finite intersections then is necessarily directed downward. The converse is generally false.
  4. Upward closed or Isotone in [6] if or equivalently, if whenever and some set satisfies Similarly, is downward closed if An upward (respectively, downward) closed set is also called an upper set or upset (resp. a lower set or down set).
    • The family which is the upward closure of is the unique smallest (with respect to ) isotone family of sets over having as a subset.

Many of the properties of defined above and below, such as "proper" and "directed downward," do not depend on so mentioning the set is optional when using such terms. Definitions involving being "upward closed in " such as that of "filter on " do depend on so the set should be mentioned if it is not clear from context.

A family is/is a(n):
  1. Ideal[17][18] if is downward closed and closed under finite unions.
  2. Dual ideal on [19] if is upward closed in and also closed under finite intersections. Equivalently, is a dual ideal if for all [20]
    • Explanation of the word "dual": A family is a dual ideal (resp. an ideal) on if and only if the dual of which is the family
      is an ideal (resp. a dual ideal) on In other words, dual ideal means "dual of an ideal". The dual of the dual is the original family, meaning [17]
  3. Filter on [19][8] if is a proper dual ideal on That is, a filter on is a non−empty subset of that is closed under finite intersections and upward closed in Equivalently, it is a prefilter that is upward closed in In words, a filter on is a family of sets over that (1) is not empty (or equivalently, it contains ), (2) is closed under finite intersections, (3) is upward closed in and (4) does not have the empty set as an element.
    • Warning: Some authors, particularly algebrists, use "filter" to mean a dual ideal; others, particularly topologists, use "filter" to mean a proper/non–degenerate dual ideal.[21] It is recommended that readers always check how "filter" is defined when reading mathematical literature. However, the definitions of "ultrafilter," "prefilter," and "filter subbase" always require non-degeneracy. This article uses Henri Cartan's original definition of "filter",[1][22] which required non–degeneracy.
    • The power set is the one and only dual ideal on that is not also a filter. Excluding from the definition of "filter" in topology has the same benefit as excluding from the definition of "prime number": it obviates the need to specify "non-degenerate" (the analog of "non-unital" or "non-") in many important results, thereby making their statements less awkward.
  4. Prefilter or filter base[8][23] if is proper and directed downward. Equivalently, is called a prefilter if its upward closure is a filter. It can also be defined as any family that is equivalent to some filter.[9] A proper family is a prefilter if and only if [9] A family is a prefilter if and only if the same is true of its upward closure.
    • If is a prefilter then its upward closure is the unique smallest (relative to ) filter on containing and it is called the filter generated by A filter is said to be generated by a prefilter if in which is called a filter base for
    • Unlike a filter, a prefilter is not necessarily closed under finite intersections.
  5. π–system if is closed under finite intersections. Every non–empty family is contained in a unique smallest π–system called the π–system generated by which is sometimes denoted by It is equal to the intersection of all π–systems containing and also to the set of all possible finite intersections of sets from :
    • A π–system is a prefilter if and only if it is proper. Every filter is a proper π–system and every proper π–system is a prefilter but the converses do not hold in general.
    • A prefilter is equivalent to the π–system generated by it and both of these families generate the same filter on
  6. Filter subbase[8][24] and centered[9] if and satisfies any of the following equivalent conditions:
    1. has the finite intersection property, which means that the intersection of any finite family of (one or more) sets in is not empty; explicitly, this means that whenever then
    2. The π–system generated by is proper; that is,
    3. The π–system generated by is a prefilter.
    4. is a subset of some prefilter.
    5. is a subset of some filter.[10]
    • Assume that is a filter subbase. Then there is a unique smallest (relative to ) filter containing called the filter generated by , and is said to be a filter subbase for this filter. This filter is equal to the intersection of all filters on that are supersets of The π–system generated by denoted by will be a prefilter and a subset of Moreover, the filter generated by is equal to the upward closure of meaning [9] However, if and only if is a prefilter (although is always an upward closed filter subbase for ).
    • A  –smallest (meaning smallest relative to  ) prefilter containing a filter subbase will exist only under certain circumstances. It exists, for example, if the filter subbase happens to also be a prefilter. It also exists if the filter (or equivalently, the π–system) generated by is principal, in which case is the unique smallest prefilter containing Otherwise, in general, a  –smallest prefilter containing
filters, topology, this, article, long, read, navigate, comfortably, consider, splitting, content, into, articles, condensing, adding, subheadings, please, discuss, this, issue, article, talk, page, november, 2022, filters, describe, characterize, basic, topol. This article may be too long to read and navigate comfortably Consider splitting content into sub articles condensing it or adding subheadings Please discuss this issue on the article s talk page November 2022 Use of filters to describe and characterize all basic topological notions and results The power set lattice of the set X 1 2 3 4 displaystyle X 1 2 3 4 with the upper set 1 4 x2191 X displaystyle 1 4 uparrow X colored dark green It is a filter and even a principal filter It is not an ultrafilter as it can be extended to the larger nontrivial filter 1 x2191 X displaystyle 1 uparrow X by including also the light green elements Because 1 x2191 X displaystyle 1 uparrow X cannot be extended any further it is an ultrafilter Filters in topology a subfield of mathematics can be used to study topological spaces and define all basic topological notions such as convergence continuity compactness and more Filters which are special families of subsets of some given set also provide a common framework for defining various types of limits of functions such as limits from the left right to infinity to a point or a set and many others Special types of filters called ultrafilters have many useful technical properties and they may often be used in place of arbitrary filters Filters have generalizations called prefilters also known as filter bases and filter subbases all of which appear naturally and repeatedly throughout topology Examples include neighborhood filters bases subbases and uniformities Every filter is a prefilter and both are filter subbases Every prefilter and filter subbase is contained in a unique smallest filter which they are said to generate This establishes a relationship between filters and prefilters that may often be exploited to allow one to use whichever of these two notions is more technically convenient There is a certain preorder on families of sets denoted by x2264 displaystyle leq that helps to determine exactly when and how one notion filter prefilter etc can or cannot be used in place of another This preorder s importance is amplified by the fact that it also defines the notion of filter convergence where by definition a filter or prefilter B displaystyle mathcal B converges to a point if and only if N x2264 B displaystyle mathcal N leq mathcal B where N displaystyle mathcal N is that point s neighborhood filter Consequently subordination also plays an important role in many concepts that are related to convergence such as cluster points and limits of functions In addition the relation S x2265 B displaystyle mathcal S geq mathcal B which denotes B x2264 S displaystyle mathcal B leq mathcal S and is expressed by saying that S displaystyle mathcal S is subordinate to B displaystyle mathcal B also establishes a relationship in which S displaystyle mathcal S is to B displaystyle mathcal B as a subsequence is to a sequence that is the relation x2265 displaystyle geq which is called subordination is for filters the analog of is a subsequence of Filters were introduced by Henri Cartan in 1937 91 1 93 and subsequently used by Bourbaki in their book Topologie Generale as an alternative to the similar notion of a net developed in 1922 by E H Moore and H L Smith Filters can also be used to characterize the notions of sequence and net convergence But unlike 91 note 1 93 sequence and net convergence filter convergence is defined entirely in terms of subsets of the topological space X displaystyle X and so it provides a notion of convergence that is completely intrinsic to the topological space indeed the category of topological spaces can be equivalently defined entirely in terms of filters Every net induces a canonical filter and dually every filter induces a canonical net where this induced net resp induced filter converges to a point if and only if the same is true of the original filter resp net This characterization also holds for many other definitions such as cluster points These relationships make it possible to switch between filters and nets and they often also allow one to choose whichever of these two notions filter or net is more convenient for the problem at hand However assuming that subnet is defined using either of its most popular definitions which are those given by Willard and by Kelley then in general this relationship does not extend to subordinate filters and subnets because as detailed below there exist subordinate filters whose filter subordinate filter relationship cannot be described in terms of the corresponding net subnet relationship this issue can however be resolved by using a less commonly encountered definition of subnet which is that of an AA subnet Thus filters prefilters and this single preorder x2264 displaystyle leq provide a framework that seamlessly ties together fundamental topological concepts such as topological spaces via neighborhood filters neighborhood bases convergence various limits of functions continuity compactness sequences via sequential filters the filter equivalent of subsequence subordination uniform spaces and more concepts that otherwise seem relatively disparate and whose relationships are less clear Contents 1 Motivation 2 Preliminaries notation and basic notions 2 1 Filters and prefilters 2 1 1 Basic examples 2 1 2 Ultrafilters 2 1 3 Kernels 2 1 3 1 Classifying families by their kernels 2 1 3 2 Characterizing fixed ultra prefilters 2 2 Finer coarser subordination and meshing 2 2 1 Equivalent families of sets 3 Set theoretic properties and constructions relevant to topology 3 1 Trace and meshing 3 2 Images and preimages under functions 3 2 1 Subordination is preserved by images and preimages 3 3 Products of prefilters 4 Convergence limits and cluster points 4 1 Limits and convergence 4 2 Cluster points 4 3 Properties and relationships 4 4 Limits of functions defined as limits of prefilters 5 Filters and nets 5 1 Nets to prefilters 5 2 Prefilters to nets 5 3 Subordinate filters and subnets 5 3 1 Subordination analogs of results involving subsequences 5 3 2 Non equivalence of subnets and subordinate filters 6 Topologies and prefilters 6 1 Examples of relationships between filters and topologies 6 2 Topological properties and prefilters 7 Examples of applications of prefilters 7 1 Uniformities and Cauchy prefilters 7 2 Topologizing the set of prefilters 8 See also 9 Notes 10 Citations 11 References Motivation edit Archetypical example of a filter See also Filter set theory The archetypical example of a filter is the neighborhood filter N x displaystyle mathcal N x at a point x displaystyle x in a topological space X x03C4 displaystyle X tau which is the family of sets consisting of all neighborhoods of x displaystyle x By definition a neighborhood of some given point x displaystyle x is any subset B x2286 X displaystyle B subseteq X whose topological interior contains this point that is such that x x2208 Int X x2061 B displaystyle x in operatorname Int X B Importantly neighborhoods are not required to be open sets those are called open neighborhoods Listed below are those fundamental properties of neighborhood filters that ultimately became the definition of a filter A filter on X displaystyle X is a set B displaystyle mathcal B of subsets of X displaystyle X that satisfies all of the following conditions Not empty 160 X x2208 B displaystyle X in mathcal B 8201 8201 just as X x2208 N x displaystyle X in mathcal N x since X displaystyle X is always a neighborhood of x displaystyle x and of anything else that it contains Does not contain the empty set 160 x2205 x2209 B displaystyle varnothing not in mathcal B 8201 8201 just as no neighborhood of x displaystyle x is empty Closed under finite intersections 160 If B C x2208 B xA0 then xA0 B x2229 C x2208 B displaystyle B C in mathcal B text then B cap C in mathcal B 8201 8201 just as the intersection of any two neighborhoods of x displaystyle x is again a neighborhood of x displaystyle x Upward closed 160 If B x2208 B xA0 and xA0 B x2286 S x2286 X displaystyle B in mathcal B text and B subseteq S subseteq X then S x2208 B displaystyle S in mathcal B 8201 8201 just as any subset of X displaystyle X that contains a neighborhood of x displaystyle x will necessarily be a neighborhood of x displaystyle x this follows from Int X x2061 B x2286 Int X x2061 S displaystyle operatorname Int X B subseteq operatorname Int X S and the definition of a neighborhood of x displaystyle x Generalizing sequence convergence by using sets determining sequence convergence without the sequence See also Limit of a sequence and Net mathematics A sequence in X displaystyle X is by definition a map N x2192 X displaystyle mathbb N to X from the natural numbers into the space X displaystyle X The original notion of convergence in a topological space was that of a sequence converging to some given point in a space such as a metric space With metrizable spaces or more generally first countable spaces or Frechet Urysohn spaces sequences usually suffices to characterize or describe most topological properties such as the closures of subsets or continuity of functions But there are many spaces where sequences can not be used to describe even basic topological properties like closure or continuity This failure of sequences was the motivation for defining notions such as nets and filters which never fail to characterize topological properties Nets directly generalize the notion of a sequence since nets are by definition maps I x2192 X displaystyle I to X from an arbitrary directed set I x2264 displaystyle I leq into the space X displaystyle X A sequence is just a net whose domain is I N displaystyle I mathbb N with the natural ordering Nets have their own notion of convergence which is a direct generalization of sequence convergence Filters generalize sequence convergence in a different way by considering only the values of a sequence To see how this is done consider a sequence x x2219 x i i 1 x221E xA0 in xA0 X displaystyle x bullet left x i right i 1 infty text in X which is by definition just a function x x2219 N x2192 X displaystyle x bullet mathbb N to X whose value at i x2208 N displaystyle i in mathbb N is denoted by x i displaystyle x i rather than by the usual parentheses notation x x2219 i displaystyle x bullet i that is commonly used for arbitrary functions Knowing only the image sometimes called the range Im x2061 x x2219 x i i x2208 N x 1 x 2 x2026 displaystyle operatorname Im x bullet left x i i in mathbb N right left x 1 x 2 ldots right of the sequence is not enough to characterize its convergence multiple sets are needed It turns out that the needed sets are the following 91 note 2 93 which are called the tails of the sequence x x2219 displaystyle x bullet x x2265 1 x 1 x 2 x 3 x 4 x2026 x x2265 2 x 2 x 3 x 4 x 5 x2026 x x2265 3 x 3 x 4 x 5 x 6 x2026 x22EE x x2265 n x n x n 1 x n 2 x n 3 x2026 x22EE displaystyle begin alignedat 8 x geq 1 amp amp amp x 1 amp amp x 2 amp amp x 3 amp amp x 4 amp amp ldots amp amp 0 3ex x geq 2 amp amp amp x 2 amp amp x 3 amp amp x 4 amp amp x 5 amp amp ldots amp amp 0 3ex x geq 3 amp amp amp x 3 amp amp x 4 amp amp x 5 amp amp x 6 amp amp ldots amp amp 0 3ex amp amp amp amp amp amp amp vdots amp amp amp amp amp amp 0 3ex x geq n amp amp amp x n amp amp x n 1 amp amp x n 2 amp amp x n 3 amp amp ldots amp amp 0 3ex amp amp amp amp amp amp amp vdots amp amp amp amp amp amp 0 3ex end alignedat These sets completely determine this sequence s convergence or non convergence because given any point this sequence converges to it if and only if for every neighborhood U displaystyle U of this point there is some integer n displaystyle n such that U displaystyle U contains all of the points x n x n 1 x2026 displaystyle x n x n 1 ldots This can be reworded as 160 160 160 every neighborhood U displaystyle U must contain some set of the form x n x n 1 x2026 displaystyle x n x n 1 ldots as a subset Or more briefly every neighborhood must contain some tail x x2265 n displaystyle x geq n as a subset It is this characterization that can be used with the above family of tails to determine convergence or non convergence of the sequence x x2219 N x2192 X displaystyle x bullet mathbb N to X Specifically with the family of sets x x2265 1 x x2265 2 x2026 displaystyle x geq 1 x geq 2 ldots in hand the function x x2219 N x2192 X displaystyle x bullet mathbb N to X is no longer needed to determine convergence of this sequence no matter what topology is placed on X displaystyle X By generalizing this observation the notion of convergence can be extended from sequences functions to families of sets The above set of tails of a sequence is in general not a filter but it does generate a filter via taking its upward closure which consists of all supersets of all tails The same is true of other important families of sets such as any neighborhood basis at a given point which in general is also not a filter but does generate a filter via its upward closure in particular it generates the neighborhood filter at that point The properties that these families share led to the notion of a filter base also called a prefilter which by definition is any family having the minimal properties necessary and sufficient for it to generate a filter via taking its upward closure Nets versus filters advantages and disadvantagesFilters and nets each have their own advantages and drawbacks and there s no reason to use one notion exclusively over the other 91 note 3 93 Depending on what is being proved a proof may be made significantly easier by using one of these notions instead of the other 91 2 93 Both filters and nets can be used to completely characterize any given topology Nets are direct generalizations of sequences and can often be used similarly to sequences so the learning curve for nets is typically much less steep than that for filters However filters and especially ultrafilters have many more uses outside of topology such as in set theory mathematical logic model theory ultraproducts for example abstract algebra 91 3 93 combinatorics 91 4 93 dynamics 91 4 93 order theory generalized convergence spaces Cauchy spaces and in the definition and use of hyperreal numbers Like sequences nets are functions and so they have the advantages of functions For example like sequences nets can be plugged into other functions where plugging in is just function composition Theorems related to functions and function composition may then be applied to nets One example is the universal property of inverse limits which is defined in terms of composition of functions rather than sets and it is more readily applied to functions like nets than to sets like filters a prominent example of an inverse limit is the Cartesian product Filters may be awkward to use in certain situations such as when switching between a filter on a space X displaystyle X and a filter on a dense subspace S x2286 X displaystyle S subseteq X 91 5 93 In contrast to nets filters and prefilters are families of sets and so they have the advantages of sets For example if f displaystyle f is surjective then the image f x2212 1 B f x2212 1 B xA0 xA0 B x2208 B displaystyle f 1 mathcal B left f 1 B B in mathcal B right under f x2212 1 displaystyle f 1 of an arbitrary filter or prefilter B displaystyle mathcal B is both easily defined and guaranteed to be a prefilter on f displaystyle f s domain whereas it is less clear how to pullback unambiguously without choice an arbitrary sequence or net y x2219 displaystyle y bullet so as to obtain a sequence or net in the domain unless f displaystyle f is also injective and consequently a bijection which is a stringent requirement Similarly the intersection of any collection of filters is once again a filter whereas it is not clear what this could mean for sequences or nets Because filters are composed of subsets of the very topological space X displaystyle X that is under consideration topological set operations such as closure or interior may be applied to the sets that constitute the filter Taking the closure of all the sets in a filter is sometimes useful in functional analysis for instance Theorems and results about images or preimages of sets under a function may also be applied to the sets that constitute a filter an example of such a result might be one of continuity s characterizations in terms of preimages of open closed sets or in terms of the interior closure operators Special types of filters called ultrafilters have many useful properties that can significantly help in proving results One downside of nets is their dependence on the directed sets that constitute their domains which in general may be entirely unrelated to the space X displaystyle X In fact the class of nets in a given set X displaystyle X is too large to even be a set it is a proper class this is because nets in X displaystyle X can have domains of any cardinality In contrast the collection of all filters and of all prefilters on X displaystyle X is a set whose cardinality is no larger than that of x2118 x2118 X displaystyle wp wp X Similar to a topology on X displaystyle X a filter on X displaystyle X is intrinsic to X displaystyle X in the sense that both structures consist entirely of subsets of X displaystyle X and neither definition requires any set that cannot be constructed from X displaystyle X such as N displaystyle mathbb N or other directed sets which sequences and nets require Preliminaries notation and basic notions edit Main article Filter set theory In this article upper case Roman letters like S xA0 and xA0 X displaystyle S text and X denote sets but not families unless indicated otherwise and x2118 X displaystyle wp X will denote the power set of X displaystyle X A subset of a power set is called a family of sets or simply a family where it is over X displaystyle X if it is a subset of x2118 X displaystyle wp X Families of sets will be denoted by upper case calligraphy letters such as B C xA0 and xA0 F displaystyle mathcal B mathcal C text and mathcal F Whenever these assumptions are needed then it should be assumed that X displaystyle X is non empty and that B F displaystyle mathcal B mathcal F etc are families of sets over X displaystyle X The terms prefilter and filter base are synonyms and will be used interchangeably Warning about competing definitions and notationThere are unfortunately several terms in the theory of filters that are defined differently by different authors These include some of the most important terms such as filter While different definitions of the same term usually have significant overlap due to the very technical nature of filters and point set topology these differences in definitions nevertheless often have important consequences When reading mathematical literature it is recommended that readers check how the terminology related to filters is defined by the author For this reason this article will clearly state all definitions as they are used Unfortunately not all notation related to filters is well established and some notation varies greatly across the literature for example the notation for the set of all prefilters on a set so in such cases this article uses whatever notation is most self describing or easily remembered The theory of filters and prefilters is well developed and has a plethora of definitions and notations many of which are now unceremoniously listed to prevent this article from becoming prolix and to allow for the easy look up of notation and definitions Their important properties are described later Sets operationsThe upward closure or isotonization in X displaystyle X 91 6 93 91 7 93 of a family of sets B x2286 x2118 X displaystyle mathcal B subseteq wp X is B x2191 X S x2286 X xA0 xA0 B x2286 S xA0 for some xA0 B x2208 B x22C3 B x2208 B S xA0 xA0 B x2286 S x2286 X displaystyle mathcal B uparrow X S subseteq X B subseteq S text for some B in mathcal B textstyle bigcup limits B in mathcal B S B subseteq S subseteq X and similarly the downward closure of B displaystyle mathcal B is B x2193 S x2286 B xA0 xA0 B x2208 B x22C3 B x2208 B x2118 B displaystyle mathcal B downarrow S subseteq B B in mathcal B textstyle bigcup limits B in mathcal B wp B Notation and Definition Name ker x2061 B x22C2 B x2208 B B displaystyle ker mathcal B bigcap B in mathcal B B Kernel of B displaystyle mathcal B 91 7 93 S x2216 B S x2216 B xA0 xA0 B x2208 B S x2216 B displaystyle S setminus mathcal B S setminus B B in mathcal B S setminus mathcal B Dual of B xA0 in xA0 S displaystyle mathcal B text in S where S displaystyle S is a set 91 8 93 B S B x2229 S xA0 xA0 B x2208 B B x2229 S displaystyle mathcal B big vert S B cap S B in mathcal B mathcal B cap S Trace of B xA0 on xA0 S displaystyle mathcal B text on S 91 8 93 or the restriction of B xA0 to xA0 S displaystyle mathcal B text to S where S displaystyle S is a set sometimes denoted by B x2229 S displaystyle mathcal B cap S B x2229 C B x2229 C xA0 xA0 B x2208 B xA0 and xA0 C x2208 C displaystyle mathcal B cap mathcal C B cap C B in mathcal B text and C in mathcal C 91 9 93 Elementwise set intersection B x2229 C displaystyle mathcal B cap mathcal C will denote the usual intersection B x222A C B x222A C xA0 xA0 B x2208 B xA0 and xA0 C x2208 C displaystyle mathcal B cup mathcal C B cup C B in mathcal B text and C in mathcal C 91 9 93 Elementwise set union B x222A C displaystyle mathcal B cup mathcal C will denote the usual union B x2216 C B x2216 C xA0 xA0 B x2208 B xA0 and xA0 C x2208 C displaystyle mathcal B setminus mathcal C B setminus C B in mathcal B text and C in mathcal C Elementwise set subtraction B x2216 C displaystyle mathcal B setminus mathcal C will denote the usual set subtraction x2118 X S xA0 xA0 S x2286 X displaystyle wp X S S subseteq X Power set of a set X displaystyle X 91 7 93 For any two families C xA0 and xA0 F displaystyle mathcal C text and mathcal F declare that C x2264 F displaystyle mathcal C leq mathcal F if and only if for every C x2208 C displaystyle C in mathcal C there exists some F x2208 F xA0 such that xA0 F x2286 C displaystyle F in mathcal F text such that F subseteq C in which case it is said that C displaystyle mathcal C is coarser than F displaystyle mathcal F and that F displaystyle mathcal F is finer than or subordinate to C displaystyle mathcal C 91 10 93 91 11 93 91 12 93 The notation F x22A2 C xA0 or xA0 F x2265 C displaystyle mathcal F vdash mathcal C text or mathcal F geq mathcal C may also be used in place of C x2264 F displaystyle mathcal C leq mathcal F If C x2264 F displaystyle mathcal C leq mathcal F and F x2264 C displaystyle mathcal F leq mathcal C then C xA0 and xA0 F displaystyle mathcal C text and mathcal F are said to be equivalent with respect to subordination Two families B xA0 and xA0 C displaystyle mathcal B text and mathcal C mesh 91 8 93 written B x0023 C displaystyle mathcal B mathcal C if B x2229 C x2260 x2205 xA0 for all xA0 B x2208 B xA0 and xA0 C x2208 C displaystyle B cap C neq varnothing text for all B in mathcal B text and C in mathcal C Throughout f displaystyle f is a map Notation and Definition Name f x2212 1 B f x2212 1 B xA0 xA0 B x2208 B displaystyle f 1 mathcal B left f 1 B B in mathcal B right 91 13 93 Image of B xA0 under xA0 f x2212 1 displaystyle mathcal B text under f 1 or the preimage of B displaystyle mathcal B under f displaystyle f f B f B xA0 xA0 B x2208 B displaystyle f mathcal B f B B in mathcal B 91 14 93 Image of B displaystyle mathcal B under f displaystyle f image x2061 f f domain x2061 f displaystyle operatorname image f f operatorname domain f Image or range of f displaystyle f Topology notationDenote the set of all topologies on a set X xA0 by xA0 Top x2061 X displaystyle X text by operatorname Top X Suppose x03C4 x2208 Top x2061 X displaystyle tau in operatorname Top X S x2286 X displaystyle S subseteq X is any subset and x x2208 X displaystyle x in X is any point Notation and Definition Name x03C4 S O x2208 x03C4 xA0 xA0 S x2286 O displaystyle tau S O in tau S subseteq O Set or prefilter 91 note 4 93 of open neighborhoods of S xA0 in xA0 X x03C4 displaystyle S text in X tau x03C4 x O x2208 x03C4 xA0 xA0 x x2208 O displaystyle tau x O in tau x in O Set or prefilter of open neighborhoods of x xA0 in xA0 X x03C4 displaystyle x text in X tau N x03C4 S N S x03C4 S x2191 X displaystyle mathcal N tau S mathcal N S tau S uparrow X Set or filter 91 note 4 93 of neighborhoods of S xA0 in xA0 X x03C4 displaystyle S text in X tau N x03C4 x N x x03C4 x x2191 X displaystyle mathcal N tau x mathcal N x tau x uparrow X Set or filter of neighborhoods of x xA0 in xA0 X x03C4 displaystyle x text in X tau If x2205 x2260 S x2286 X displaystyle varnothing neq S subseteq X then x03C4 S x22C2 s x2208 S x03C4 s xA0 and xA0 N x03C4 S x22C2 s x2208 S N x03C4 s displaystyle tau S textstyle bigcap limits s in S tau s text and mathcal N tau S textstyle bigcap limits s in S mathcal N tau s Nets and their tailsA directed set is a set I displaystyle I together with a preorder which will be denoted by x2264 displaystyle leq unless explicitly indicated otherwise that makes I x2264 displaystyle I leq into an upward directed set 91 15 93 this means that for all i j x2208 I displaystyle i j in I there exists some k x2208 I displaystyle k in I such that i x2264 k xA0 and xA0 j x2264 k displaystyle i leq k text and j leq k For any indices i xA0 and xA0 j displaystyle i text and j the notation j x2265 i displaystyle j geq i is defined to mean i x2264 j displaystyle i leq j while i lt j displaystyle i lt j is defined to mean that i x2264 j displaystyle i leq j holds but it is not true that j x2264 i displaystyle j leq i if x2264 displaystyle leq is antisymmetric then this is equivalent to i x2264 j xA0 and xA0 i x2260 j displaystyle i leq j text and i neq j A net in X displaystyle X 91 15 93 is a map from a non empty directed set into X displaystyle X The notation x x2219 x i i x2208 I displaystyle x bullet left x i right i in I will be used to denote a net with domain I displaystyle I Notation and Definition Name I x2265 i j x2208 I xA0 xA0 j x2265 i displaystyle I geq i j in I j geq i Tail or section of I displaystyle I starting at i x2208 I displaystyle i in I where I x2264 displaystyle I leq is a directed set x x2265 i x j xA0 xA0 j x2265 i xA0 and xA0 j x2208 I displaystyle x geq i left x j j geq i text and j in I right Tail or section of x x2219 x i i x2208 I displaystyle x bullet left x i right i in I starting at i x2208 I displaystyle i in I Tails x2061 x x2219 x x2265 i xA0 xA0 i x2208 I displaystyle operatorname Tails left x bullet right left x geq i i in I right Set or prefilter of tails sections of x x2219 displaystyle x bullet Also called the eventuality filter base generated by the tails of x x2219 x i i x2208 I displaystyle x bullet left x i right i in I If x x2219 displaystyle x bullet is a sequence then Tails x2061 x x2219 displaystyle operatorname Tails left x bullet right is also called the sequential filter base 91 16 93 TailsFilter x2061 x x2219 Tails x2061 x x2219 x2191 X displaystyle operatorname TailsFilter left x bullet right operatorname Tails left x bullet right uparrow X Eventuality filter of generated by tails of x x2219 displaystyle x bullet 91 16 93 f I x2265 i f j xA0 xA0 j x2265 i xA0 and xA0 j x2208 I displaystyle f left I geq i right f j j geq i text and j in I Tail or section of a net f I x2192 X displaystyle f I to X starting at i x2208 I displaystyle i in I 91 16 93 where I x2264 displaystyle I leq is a directed set Warning about using strict comparisonIf x x2219 x i i x2208 I displaystyle x bullet left x i right i in I is a net and i x2208 I displaystyle i in I then it is possible for the set x gt i x j xA0 xA0 j gt i xA0 and xA0 j x2208 I displaystyle x gt i left x j j gt i text and j in I right which is called the tail of x x2219 displaystyle x bullet after i displaystyle i to be empty for example this happens if i displaystyle i is an upper bound of the directed set I displaystyle I In this case the family x gt i xA0 xA0 i x2208 I displaystyle left x gt i i in I right would contain the empty set which would prevent it from being a prefilter defined later This is the important reason for defining Tails x2061 x x2219 displaystyle operatorname Tails left x bullet right as x x2265 i xA0 xA0 i x2208 I displaystyle left x geq i i in I right rather than x gt i xA0 xA0 i x2208 I displaystyle left x gt i i in I right or even x gt i xA0 xA0 i x2208 I x222A x x2265 i xA0 xA0 i x2208 I displaystyle left x gt i i in I right cup left x geq i i in I right and it is for this reason that in general when dealing with the prefilter of tails of a net the strict inequality lt displaystyle lt may not be used interchangeably with the inequality x2264 displaystyle leq Filters and prefilters edit Families F displaystyle mathcal F of sets over x03A9 displaystyle Omega vte Is necessarily true of F x003A displaystyle mathcal F colon or is F displaystyle mathcal F closed under Directedby x2287 displaystyle supseteq A x2229 B displaystyle A cap B A x222A B displaystyle A cup B B x2216 A displaystyle B setminus A x03A9 x2216 A displaystyle Omega setminus A A 1 x2229 A 2 x2229 x22EF displaystyle A 1 cap A 2 cap cdots A 1 x222A A 2 x222A x22EF displaystyle A 1 cup A 2 cup cdots x03A9 x2208 F displaystyle Omega in mathcal F x2205 x2208 F displaystyle varnothing in mathcal F F I P p system Semiring Never Semialgebra Semifield Never Monotone class only if A i x2198 displaystyle A i searrow only if A i x2197 displaystyle A i nearrow 𝜆 system Dynkin System only ifA x2286 B displaystyle A subseteq B only if A i x2197 displaystyle A i nearrow orthey are disjoint Never Ring Order theory Ring Measure theory Never d Ring Never 𝜎 Ring Never Algebra Field Never 𝜎 Algebra 𝜎 Field Never Dual ideal Filter Never Never x2205 x2209 F displaystyle varnothing not in mathcal F Prefilter Filter base Never Never x2205 x2209 F displaystyle varnothing not in mathcal F Filter subbase Never Never x2205 x2209 F displaystyle varnothing not in mathcal F Open Topology even arbitrary x222A displaystyle cup Never Closed Topology even arbitrary x2229 displaystyle cap Never Is necessarily true of F x003A displaystyle mathcal F colon or is F displaystyle mathcal F closed under directeddownward finiteintersections finiteunions relativecomplements complementsin x03A9 displaystyle Omega countableintersections countableunions contains x03A9 displaystyle Omega contains x2205 displaystyle varnothing FiniteIntersectionProperty Additionally a semiring is a p system where every complement B x2216 A displaystyle B setminus A is equal to a finite disjoint union of sets in F displaystyle mathcal F A semialgebra is a semiring where every complement x03A9 x2216 A displaystyle Omega setminus A is equal to a finite disjoint union of sets in F displaystyle mathcal F A B A 1 A 2 x2026 displaystyle A B A 1 A 2 ldots are arbitrary elements of F displaystyle mathcal F and it is assumed that F x2260 x2205 displaystyle mathcal F neq varnothing Main article Filter set theory The following is a list of properties that a family B displaystyle mathcal B of sets may possess and they form the defining properties of filters prefilters and filter subbases Whenever it is necessary it should be assumed that B x2286 x2118 X displaystyle mathcal B subseteq wp X The family of sets B displaystyle mathcal B is Proper or nondegenerate if x2205 x2209 B displaystyle varnothing not in mathcal B Otherwise if x2205 x2208 B displaystyle varnothing in mathcal B then it is called improper 91 17 93 or degenerate Directed downward 91 15 93 if whenever A B x2208 B displaystyle A B in mathcal B then there exists some C x2208 B displaystyle C in mathcal B such that C x2286 A x2229 B displaystyle C subseteq A cap B This property can be characterized in terms of directedness which explains the word directed A binary relation x2AAF displaystyle preceq on B displaystyle mathcal B is called upward directed if for any two A xA0 and xA0 B displaystyle A text and B there is some C displaystyle C satisfying A x2AAF C xA0 and xA0 B x2AAF C displaystyle A preceq C text and B preceq C Using x2287 displaystyle supseteq in place of x2AAF displaystyle preceq gives the definition of directed downward whereas using x2286 displaystyle subseteq instead gives the definition of directed upward Explicitly B displaystyle mathcal B is directed downward resp directed upward if and only if for all A B x2208 B displaystyle A B in mathcal B there exists some greater C x2208 B displaystyle C in mathcal B such that A x2287 C xA0 and xA0 B x2287 C displaystyle A supseteq C text and B supseteq C resp such that A x2286 C xA0 and xA0 B x2286 C displaystyle A subseteq C text and B subseteq C where the greater element is always on the right hand side which can be rewritten as A x2229 B x2287 C displaystyle A cap B supseteq C resp as A x222A B x2286 C displaystyle A cup B subseteq C Closed under finite intersections resp unions if the intersection resp union of any two elements of B displaystyle mathcal B is an element of B displaystyle mathcal B If B displaystyle mathcal B is closed under finite intersections then B displaystyle mathcal B is necessarily directed downward The converse is generally false Upward closed or Isotone in X displaystyle X 91 6 93 if B x2286 x2118 X xA0 and xA0 B B x2191 X displaystyle mathcal B subseteq wp X text and mathcal B mathcal B uparrow X or equivalently if whenever B x2208 B displaystyle B in mathcal B and some set C displaystyle C satisfies B x2286 C x2286 X xA0 then xA0 C x2208 B displaystyle B subseteq C subseteq X text then C in mathcal B Similarly B displaystyle mathcal B is downward closed if B B x2193 displaystyle mathcal B mathcal B downarrow An upward respectively downward closed set is also called an upper set or upset resp a lower set or down set The family B x2191 X displaystyle mathcal B uparrow X which is the upward closure of B xA0 in xA0 X displaystyle mathcal B text in X is the unique smallest with respect to x2286 displaystyle subseteq isotone family of sets over X displaystyle X having B displaystyle mathcal B as a subset Many of the properties of B displaystyle mathcal B defined above and below such as proper and directed downward do not depend on X displaystyle X so mentioning the set X displaystyle X is optional when using such terms Definitions involving being upward closed in X displaystyle X such as that of filter on X displaystyle X do depend on X displaystyle X so the set X displaystyle X should be mentioned if it is not clear from context A family B displaystyle mathcal B is is a n Ideal 91 17 93 91 18 93 if B x2260 x2205 displaystyle mathcal B neq varnothing is downward closed and closed under finite unions Dual ideal on X displaystyle X 91 19 93 if B x2260 x2205 displaystyle mathcal B neq varnothing is upward closed in X displaystyle X and also closed under finite intersections Equivalently B x2260 x2205 displaystyle mathcal B neq varnothing is a dual ideal if for all R S x2286 X displaystyle R S subseteq X R x2229 S x2208 B xA0 if and only if xA0 R S x2208 B displaystyle R cap S in mathcal B text if and only if R S in mathcal B 91 20 93 Explanation of the word dual A family B displaystyle mathcal B is a dual ideal resp an ideal on X displaystyle X if and only if the dual of B xA0 in xA0 X displaystyle mathcal B text in X which is the family X x2216 B X x2216 B xA0 xA0 B x2208 B displaystyle X setminus mathcal B X setminus B B in mathcal B is an ideal resp a dual ideal on X displaystyle X In other words dual ideal means dual of an ideal The dual of the dual is the original family meaning X x2216 X x2216 B B displaystyle X setminus X setminus mathcal B mathcal B 91 17 93 Filter on X displaystyle X 91 19 93 91 8 93 if B displaystyle mathcal B is a proper dual ideal on X displaystyle X That is a filter on X displaystyle X is a non empty subset of x2118 X x2216 x2205 displaystyle wp X setminus varnothing that is closed under finite intersections and upward closed in X displaystyle X Equivalently it is a prefilter that is upward closed in X displaystyle X In words a filter on X displaystyle X is a family of sets over X displaystyle X that 1 is not empty or equivalently it contains X displaystyle X 2 is closed under finite intersections 3 is upward closed in X displaystyle X and 4 does not have the empty set as an element Warning Some authors particularly algebrists use filter to mean a dual ideal others particularly topologists use filter to mean a proper non degenerate dual ideal 91 21 93 It is recommended that readers always check how filter is defined when reading mathematical literature However the definitions of ultrafilter prefilter and filter subbase always require non degeneracy This article uses Henri Cartan s original definition of filter 91 1 93 91 22 93 which required non degeneracy The power set x2118 X displaystyle wp X is the one and only dual ideal on X displaystyle X that is not also a filter Excluding x2118 X displaystyle wp X from the definition of filter in topology has the same benefit as excluding 1 displaystyle 1 from the definition of prime number it obviates the need to specify non degenerate the analog of non unital or non 1 displaystyle 1 in many important results thereby making their statements less awkward Prefilter or filter base 91 8 93 91 23 93 if B x2260 x2205 displaystyle mathcal B neq varnothing is proper and directed downward Equivalently B displaystyle mathcal B is called a prefilter if its upward closure B x2191 X displaystyle mathcal B uparrow X is a filter It can also be defined as any family that is equivalent to some filter 91 9 93 A proper family B x2260 x2205 displaystyle mathcal B neq varnothing is a prefilter if and only if B x2229 B x2264 B displaystyle mathcal B cap mathcal B leq mathcal B 91 9 93 A family is a prefilter if and only if the same is true of its upward closure If B displaystyle mathcal B is a prefilter then its upward closure B x2191 X displaystyle mathcal B uparrow X is the unique smallest relative to x2286 displaystyle subseteq filter on X displaystyle X containing B displaystyle mathcal B and it is called the filter generated by B displaystyle mathcal B A filter F displaystyle mathcal F is said to be generated by a prefilter B displaystyle mathcal B if F B x2191 X displaystyle mathcal F mathcal B uparrow X in which B displaystyle mathcal B is called a filter base for F displaystyle mathcal F Unlike a filter a prefilter is not necessarily closed under finite intersections p system if B x2260 x2205 displaystyle mathcal B neq varnothing is closed under finite intersections Every non empty family B displaystyle mathcal B is contained in a unique smallest p system called the p system generated by B displaystyle mathcal B which is sometimes denoted by x03C0 B displaystyle pi mathcal B It is equal to the intersection of all p systems containing B displaystyle mathcal B and also to the set of all possible finite intersections of sets from B displaystyle mathcal B x03C0 B B 1 x2229 x22EF x2229 B n xA0 xA0 n x2265 1 xA0 and xA0 B 1 x2026 B n x2208 B displaystyle pi mathcal B left B 1 cap cdots cap B n n geq 1 text and B 1 ldots B n in mathcal B right A p system is a prefilter if and only if it is proper Every filter is a proper p system and every proper p system is a prefilter but the converses do not hold in general A prefilter is equivalent to the p system generated by it and both of these families generate the same filter on X displaystyle X Filter subbase 91 8 93 91 24 93 and centered 91 9 93 if B x2260 x2205 displaystyle mathcal B neq varnothing and B displaystyle mathcal B satisfies any of the following equivalent conditions B displaystyle mathcal B has the finite intersection property which means that the intersection of any finite family of one or more sets in B displaystyle mathcal B is not empty explicitly this means that whenever n x2265 1 xA0 and xA0 B 1 x2026 B n x2208 B displaystyle n geq 1 text and B 1 ldots B n in mathcal B then x2205 x2260 B 1 x2229 x22EF x2229 B n displaystyle varnothing neq B 1 cap cdots cap B n The p system generated by B displaystyle mathcal B is proper that is x2205 x2209 x03C0 B displaystyle varnothing not in pi mathcal B The p system generated by B displaystyle mathcal B is a prefilter B displaystyle mathcal B is a subset of some prefilter B displaystyle mathcal B is a subset of some filter 91 10 93 Assume that B displaystyle mathcal B is a filter subbase Then there is a unique smallest relative to x2286 displaystyle subseteq filter F B xA0 on xA0 X displaystyle mathcal F mathcal B text on X containing B displaystyle mathcal B called the filter generated by B displaystyle mathcal B and B displaystyle mathcal B is said to be a filter subbase for this filter This filter is equal to the intersection of all filters on X displaystyle X that are supersets of B displaystyle mathcal B The p system generated by B displaystyle mathcal B denoted by x03C0 B displaystyle pi mathcal B will be a prefilter and a subset of F B displaystyle mathcal F mathcal B Moreover the filter generated by B displaystyle mathcal B is equal to the upward closure of x03C0 B displaystyle pi mathcal B meaning x03C0 B x2191 X F B displaystyle pi mathcal B uparrow X mathcal F mathcal B 91 9 93 However B x2191 X F B displaystyle mathcal B uparrow X mathcal F mathcal B if and only if B displaystyle mathcal B is a prefilter although B x2191 X displaystyle mathcal B uparrow X is always an upward closed filter subbase for F B displaystyle mathcal F mathcal B A x2286 displaystyle subseteq 8202 smallest meaning smallest relative to x2286 displaystyle subseteq 8202 prefilter containing a filter subbase B displaystyle mathcal B will exist only under certain circumstances It exists for example if the filter subbase B displaystyle mathcal B happens to also be a prefilter It also exists if the filter or equivalently the p system generated by B displaystyle mathcal B is principal in which case B x222A ker x2061 B displaystyle mathcal B cup ker mathcal B is the unique smallest prefilter containing B displaystyle mathcal B Otherwise in general a x2286 displaystyle subseteq 8202 smallest prefilter containing mrow, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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