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Hausdorff space

In topology and related branches of mathematics, a Hausdorff space (/ˈhsdɔːrf/ HOWSS-dorf, /ˈhzdɔːrf/ HOWZ-dorf[1]), separated space or T2 space is a topological space where, for any two distinct points, there exist neighbourhoods of each which are disjoint from each other. Of the many separation axioms that can be imposed on a topological space, the "Hausdorff condition" (T2) is the most frequently used and discussed. It implies the uniqueness of limits of sequences, nets, and filters.[2]

Separation axioms
in topological spaces
Kolmogorov classification
T0 (Kolmogorov)
T1 (Fréchet)
T2 (Hausdorff)
T2½(Urysohn)
completely T2 (completely Hausdorff)
T3 (regular Hausdorff)
T(Tychonoff)
T4 (normal Hausdorff)
T5 (completely normal
 Hausdorff)
T6 (perfectly normal
 Hausdorff)

Hausdorff spaces are named after Felix Hausdorff, one of the founders of topology. Hausdorff's original definition of a topological space (in 1914) included the Hausdorff condition as an axiom.

Definitions edit

 
The points x and y, separated by their respective neighbourhoods U and V.

Points   and   in a topological space   can be separated by neighbourhoods if there exists a neighbourhood   of   and a neighbourhood   of   such that   and   are disjoint  .   is a Hausdorff space if any two distinct points in   are separated by neighbourhoods. This condition is the third separation axiom (after T0 and T1), which is why Hausdorff spaces are also called T2 spaces. The name separated space is also used.

A related, but weaker, notion is that of a preregular space.   is a preregular space if any two topologically distinguishable points can be separated by disjoint neighbourhoods. A preregular space is also called an R1 space.

The relationship between these two conditions is as follows. A topological space is Hausdorff if and only if it is both preregular (i.e. topologically distinguishable points are separated by neighbourhoods) and Kolmogorov (i.e. distinct points are topologically distinguishable). A topological space is preregular if and only if its Kolmogorov quotient is Hausdorff.

Equivalences edit

For a topological space  , the following are equivalent:[2]

  •   is a Hausdorff space.
  • Limits of nets in   are unique.[3]
  • Limits of filters on   are unique.[3]
  • Any singleton set   is equal to the intersection of all closed neighbourhoods of  .[4] (A closed neighbourhood of   is a closed set that contains an open set containing  .)
  • The diagonal   is closed as a subset of the product space  .
  • Any injection from the discrete space with two points to   has the lifting property with respect to the map from the finite topological space with two open points and one closed point to a single point.

Examples of Hausdorff and non-Hausdorff spaces edit

Almost all spaces encountered in analysis are Hausdorff; most importantly, the real numbers (under the standard metric topology on real numbers) are a Hausdorff space. More generally, all metric spaces are Hausdorff. In fact, many spaces of use in analysis, such as topological groups and topological manifolds, have the Hausdorff condition explicitly stated in their definitions.

A simple example of a topology that is T1 but is not Hausdorff is the cofinite topology defined on an infinite set, as is the cocountable topology defined on an uncountable set

Pseudometric spaces typically are not Hausdorff, but they are preregular, and their use in analysis is usually only in the construction of Hausdorff gauge spaces. Indeed, when analysts run across a non-Hausdorff space, it is still probably at least preregular, and then they simply replace it with its Kolmogorov quotient, which is Hausdorff.[5]

In contrast, non-preregular spaces are encountered much more frequently in abstract algebra and algebraic geometry, in particular as the Zariski topology on an algebraic variety or the spectrum of a ring. They also arise in the model theory of intuitionistic logic: every complete Heyting algebra is the algebra of open sets of some topological space, but this space need not be preregular, much less Hausdorff, and in fact usually is neither. The related concept of Scott domain also consists of non-preregular spaces.

While the existence of unique limits for convergent nets and filters implies that a space is Hausdorff, there are non-Hausdorff T1 spaces in which every convergent sequence has a unique limit.[6] Such spaces are called US spaces.[7] For sequential spaces, this notion is equivalent to being weakly hausdorff.

Properties edit

Subspaces and products of Hausdorff spaces are Hausdorff, but quotient spaces of Hausdorff spaces need not be Hausdorff. In fact, every topological space can be realized as the quotient of some Hausdorff space.[8]

Hausdorff spaces are T1, meaning that each singleton is a closed set. Similarly, preregular spaces are R0. Every Hausdorff space is a Sober space although the converse is in general not true.

Another property of Hausdorff spaces is that each compact set is a closed set. For non-Hausdorff spaces, it can be that each compact set is a closed set (for example, the cocountable topology on an uncountable set) or not (for example, the cofinite topology on an infinite set and the Sierpiński space).

The definition of a Hausdorff space says that points can be separated by neighborhoods. It turns out that this implies something which is seemingly stronger: in a Hausdorff space every pair of disjoint compact sets can also be separated by neighborhoods,[9] in other words there is a neighborhood of one set and a neighborhood of the other, such that the two neighborhoods are disjoint. This is an example of the general rule that compact sets often behave like points.

Compactness conditions together with preregularity often imply stronger separation axioms. For example, any locally compact preregular space is completely regular.[10][11] Compact preregular spaces are normal,[12] meaning that they satisfy Urysohn's lemma and the Tietze extension theorem and have partitions of unity subordinate to locally finite open covers. The Hausdorff versions of these statements are: every locally compact Hausdorff space is Tychonoff, and every compact Hausdorff space is normal Hausdorff.

The following results are some technical properties regarding maps (continuous and otherwise) to and from Hausdorff spaces.

Let   be a continuous function and suppose   is Hausdorff. Then the graph of  ,  , is a closed subset of  .

Let   be a function and let   be its kernel regarded as a subspace of  .

  • If   is continuous and   is Hausdorff then   is a closed set.
  • If   is an open surjection and   is a closed set then   is Hausdorff.
  • If   is a continuous, open surjection (i.e. an open quotient map) then   is Hausdorff if and only if   is a closed set.

If   are continuous maps and   is Hausdorff then the equalizer   is a closed set in  . It follows that if   is Hausdorff and   and   agree on a dense subset of   then  . In other words, continuous functions into Hausdorff spaces are determined by their values on dense subsets.

Let   be a closed surjection such that   is compact for all  . Then if   is Hausdorff so is  .

Let   be a quotient map with   a compact Hausdorff space. Then the following are equivalent:

  •   is Hausdorff.
  •   is a closed map.
  •   is a closed set.

Preregularity versus regularity edit

All regular spaces are preregular, as are all Hausdorff spaces. There are many results for topological spaces that hold for both regular and Hausdorff spaces. Most of the time, these results hold for all preregular spaces; they were listed for regular and Hausdorff spaces separately because the idea of preregular spaces came later. On the other hand, those results that are truly about regularity generally do not also apply to nonregular Hausdorff spaces.

There are many situations where another condition of topological spaces (such as paracompactness or local compactness) will imply regularity if preregularity is satisfied. Such conditions often come in two versions: a regular version and a Hausdorff version. Although Hausdorff spaces are not, in general, regular, a Hausdorff space that is also (say) locally compact will be regular, because any Hausdorff space is preregular. Thus from a certain point of view, it is really preregularity, rather than regularity, that matters in these situations. However, definitions are usually still phrased in terms of regularity, since this condition is better known than preregularity.

See History of the separation axioms for more on this issue.

Variants edit

The terms "Hausdorff", "separated", and "preregular" can also be applied to such variants on topological spaces as uniform spaces, Cauchy spaces, and convergence spaces. The characteristic that unites the concept in all of these examples is that limits of nets and filters (when they exist) are unique (for separated spaces) or unique up to topological indistinguishability (for preregular spaces).

As it turns out, uniform spaces, and more generally Cauchy spaces, are always preregular, so the Hausdorff condition in these cases reduces to the T0 condition. These are also the spaces in which completeness makes sense, and Hausdorffness is a natural companion to completeness in these cases. Specifically, a space is complete if and only if every Cauchy net has at least one limit, while a space is Hausdorff if and only if every Cauchy net has at most one limit (since only Cauchy nets can have limits in the first place).

Algebra of functions edit

The algebra of continuous (real or complex) functions on a compact Hausdorff space is a commutative C*-algebra, and conversely by the Banach–Stone theorem one can recover the topology of the space from the algebraic properties of its algebra of continuous functions. This leads to noncommutative geometry, where one considers noncommutative C*-algebras as representing algebras of functions on a noncommutative space.

Academic humour edit

  • Hausdorff condition is illustrated by the pun that in Hausdorff spaces any two points can be "housed off" from each other by open sets.[13]
  • In the Mathematics Institute of the University of Bonn, in which Felix Hausdorff researched and lectured, there is a certain room designated the Hausdorff-Raum. This is a pun, as Raum means both room and space in German.

See also edit

  • Fixed-point space – Topological space such that every endomorphism has a fixed point, a Hausdorff space X such that every continuous function f : XX has a fixed point.
  • Locally Hausdorff space
  • Non-Hausdorff manifold – generalization of manifolds
  • Quasitopological space – a set X equipped with a function that associates to every compact Hausdorff space K a collection of maps K→C satisfying certain natural conditions
  • Separation axiom – Axioms in topology defining notions of "separation"
  • Weak Hausdorff space – concept in algebraic topology

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Hausdorff space Definition & Meaning". www.dictionary.com. Retrieved 15 June 2022.
  2. ^ a b "Separation axioms in nLab". ncatlab.org.
  3. ^ a b Willard 2004, pp. 86–87
  4. ^ Bourbaki 1966, p. 75
  5. ^ See for instance Lp space#Lp spaces and Lebesgue integrals, Banach–Mazur compactum etc.
  6. ^ van Douwen, Eric K. (1993). "An anti-Hausdorff Fréchet space in which convergent sequences have unique limits". Topology and Its Applications. 51 (2): 147–158. doi:10.1016/0166-8641(93)90147-6.
  7. ^ Wilansky, Albert (1967). "Between T1 and T2". The American Mathematical Monthly. 74 (3): 261–266. doi:10.2307/2316017. JSTOR 2316017.
  8. ^ Shimrat, M. (1956). "Decomposition spaces and separation properties". Quarterly Journal of Mathematics. 2: 128–129. doi:10.1093/qmath/7.1.128.
  9. ^ Willard 2004, pp. 124
  10. ^ Schechter 1996, 17.14(d), p. 460.
  11. ^ "Locally compact preregular spaces are completely regular". math.stackexchange.com.
  12. ^ Schechter 1996, 17.7(g), p. 457.
  13. ^ Adams, Colin; Franzosa, Robert (2008). Introduction to Topology: Pure and Applied. Pearson Prentice Hall. p. 42. ISBN 978-0-13-184869-6.

References edit

hausdorff, space, topology, related, branches, mathematics, ɔːr, howss, dorf, ɔːr, howz, dorf, separated, space, space, topological, space, where, distinct, points, there, exist, neighbourhoods, each, which, disjoint, from, each, other, many, separation, axiom. In topology and related branches of mathematics a Hausdorff space ˈ h aʊ s d ɔːr f HOWSS dorf ˈ h aʊ z d ɔːr f HOWZ dorf 1 separated space or T2 space is a topological space where for any two distinct points there exist neighbourhoods of each which are disjoint from each other Of the many separation axioms that can be imposed on a topological space the Hausdorff condition T2 is the most frequently used and discussed It implies the uniqueness of limits of sequences nets and filters 2 Separation axiomsin topological spacesKolmogorov classificationT0 Kolmogorov T1 Frechet T2 Hausdorff T2 Urysohn completely T2 completely Hausdorff T3 regular Hausdorff T3 Tychonoff T4 normal Hausdorff T5 completely normal Hausdorff T6 perfectly normal Hausdorff HistoryHausdorff spaces are named after Felix Hausdorff one of the founders of topology Hausdorff s original definition of a topological space in 1914 included the Hausdorff condition as an axiom Contents 1 Definitions 2 Equivalences 3 Examples of Hausdorff and non Hausdorff spaces 4 Properties 5 Preregularity versus regularity 6 Variants 7 Algebra of functions 8 Academic humour 9 See also 10 Notes 11 ReferencesDefinitions edit nbsp The points x and y separated by their respective neighbourhoods U and V Points x displaystyle x nbsp and y displaystyle y nbsp in a topological space X displaystyle X nbsp can be separated by neighbourhoods if there exists a neighbourhood U displaystyle U nbsp of x displaystyle x nbsp and a neighbourhood V displaystyle V nbsp of y displaystyle y nbsp such that U displaystyle U nbsp and V displaystyle V nbsp are disjoint U V displaystyle U cap V varnothing nbsp X displaystyle X nbsp is a Hausdorff space if any two distinct points in X displaystyle X nbsp are separated by neighbourhoods This condition is the third separation axiom after T0 and T1 which is why Hausdorff spaces are also called T2 spaces The name separated space is also used A related but weaker notion is that of a preregular space X displaystyle X nbsp is a preregular space if any two topologically distinguishable points can be separated by disjoint neighbourhoods A preregular space is also called an R1 space The relationship between these two conditions is as follows A topological space is Hausdorff if and only if it is both preregular i e topologically distinguishable points are separated by neighbourhoods and Kolmogorov i e distinct points are topologically distinguishable A topological space is preregular if and only if its Kolmogorov quotient is Hausdorff Equivalences editFor a topological space X displaystyle X nbsp the following are equivalent 2 X displaystyle X nbsp is a Hausdorff space Limits of nets in X displaystyle X nbsp are unique 3 Limits of filters on X displaystyle X nbsp are unique 3 Any singleton set x X displaystyle x subset X nbsp is equal to the intersection of all closed neighbourhoods of x displaystyle x nbsp 4 A closed neighbourhood of x displaystyle x nbsp is a closed set that contains an open set containing x displaystyle x nbsp The diagonal D x x x X displaystyle Delta x x mid x in X nbsp is closed as a subset of the product space X X displaystyle X times X nbsp Any injection from the discrete space with two points to X displaystyle X nbsp has the lifting property with respect to the map from the finite topological space with two open points and one closed point to a single point Examples of Hausdorff and non Hausdorff spaces editSee also Non Hausdorff manifold Almost all spaces encountered in analysis are Hausdorff most importantly the real numbers under the standard metric topology on real numbers are a Hausdorff space More generally all metric spaces are Hausdorff In fact many spaces of use in analysis such as topological groups and topological manifolds have the Hausdorff condition explicitly stated in their definitions A simple example of a topology that is T1 but is not Hausdorff is the cofinite topology defined on an infinite set as is the cocountable topology defined on an uncountable setPseudometric spaces typically are not Hausdorff but they are preregular and their use in analysis is usually only in the construction of Hausdorff gauge spaces Indeed when analysts run across a non Hausdorff space it is still probably at least preregular and then they simply replace it with its Kolmogorov quotient which is Hausdorff 5 In contrast non preregular spaces are encountered much more frequently in abstract algebra and algebraic geometry in particular as the Zariski topology on an algebraic variety or the spectrum of a ring They also arise in the model theory of intuitionistic logic every complete Heyting algebra is the algebra of open sets of some topological space but this space need not be preregular much less Hausdorff and in fact usually is neither The related concept of Scott domain also consists of non preregular spaces While the existence of unique limits for convergent nets and filters implies that a space is Hausdorff there are non Hausdorff T1 spaces in which every convergent sequence has a unique limit 6 Such spaces are called US spaces 7 For sequential spaces this notion is equivalent to being weakly hausdorff Properties editSubspaces and products of Hausdorff spaces are Hausdorff but quotient spaces of Hausdorff spaces need not be Hausdorff In fact every topological space can be realized as the quotient of some Hausdorff space 8 Hausdorff spaces are T1 meaning that each singleton is a closed set Similarly preregular spaces are R0 Every Hausdorff space is a Sober space although the converse is in general not true Another property of Hausdorff spaces is that each compact set is a closed set For non Hausdorff spaces it can be that each compact set is a closed set for example the cocountable topology on an uncountable set or not for example the cofinite topology on an infinite set and the Sierpinski space The definition of a Hausdorff space says that points can be separated by neighborhoods It turns out that this implies something which is seemingly stronger in a Hausdorff space every pair of disjoint compact sets can also be separated by neighborhoods 9 in other words there is a neighborhood of one set and a neighborhood of the other such that the two neighborhoods are disjoint This is an example of the general rule that compact sets often behave like points Compactness conditions together with preregularity often imply stronger separation axioms For example any locally compact preregular space is completely regular 10 11 Compact preregular spaces are normal 12 meaning that they satisfy Urysohn s lemma and the Tietze extension theorem and have partitions of unity subordinate to locally finite open covers The Hausdorff versions of these statements are every locally compact Hausdorff space is Tychonoff and every compact Hausdorff space is normal Hausdorff The following results are some technical properties regarding maps continuous and otherwise to and from Hausdorff spaces Let f X Y displaystyle f colon X to Y nbsp be a continuous function and suppose Y displaystyle Y nbsp is Hausdorff Then the graph of f displaystyle f nbsp x f x x X displaystyle x f x mid x in X nbsp is a closed subset of X Y displaystyle X times Y nbsp Let f X Y displaystyle f colon X to Y nbsp be a function and let ker f x x f x f x displaystyle ker f triangleq x x mid f x f x nbsp be its kernel regarded as a subspace of X X displaystyle X times X nbsp If f displaystyle f nbsp is continuous and Y displaystyle Y nbsp is Hausdorff then ker f displaystyle ker f nbsp is a closed set If f displaystyle f nbsp is an open surjection and ker f displaystyle ker f nbsp is a closed set then Y displaystyle Y nbsp is Hausdorff If f displaystyle f nbsp is a continuous open surjection i e an open quotient map then Y displaystyle Y nbsp is Hausdorff if and only if ker f displaystyle ker f nbsp is a closed set If f g X Y displaystyle f g colon X to Y nbsp are continuous maps and Y displaystyle Y nbsp is Hausdorff then the equalizer eq f g x f x g x displaystyle mbox eq f g x mid f x g x nbsp is a closed set in X displaystyle X nbsp It follows that if Y displaystyle Y nbsp is Hausdorff and f displaystyle f nbsp and g displaystyle g nbsp agree on a dense subset of X displaystyle X nbsp then f g displaystyle f g nbsp In other words continuous functions into Hausdorff spaces are determined by their values on dense subsets Let f X Y displaystyle f colon X to Y nbsp be a closed surjection such that f 1 y displaystyle f 1 y nbsp is compact for all y Y displaystyle y in Y nbsp Then if X displaystyle X nbsp is Hausdorff so is Y displaystyle Y nbsp Let f X Y displaystyle f colon X to Y nbsp be a quotient map with X displaystyle X nbsp a compact Hausdorff space Then the following are equivalent Y displaystyle Y nbsp is Hausdorff f displaystyle f nbsp is a closed map ker f displaystyle ker f nbsp is a closed set Preregularity versus regularity editAll regular spaces are preregular as are all Hausdorff spaces There are many results for topological spaces that hold for both regular and Hausdorff spaces Most of the time these results hold for all preregular spaces they were listed for regular and Hausdorff spaces separately because the idea of preregular spaces came later On the other hand those results that are truly about regularity generally do not also apply to nonregular Hausdorff spaces There are many situations where another condition of topological spaces such as paracompactness or local compactness will imply regularity if preregularity is satisfied Such conditions often come in two versions a regular version and a Hausdorff version Although Hausdorff spaces are not in general regular a Hausdorff space that is also say locally compact will be regular because any Hausdorff space is preregular Thus from a certain point of view it is really preregularity rather than regularity that matters in these situations However definitions are usually still phrased in terms of regularity since this condition is better known than preregularity See History of the separation axioms for more on this issue Variants editThe terms Hausdorff separated and preregular can also be applied to such variants on topological spaces as uniform spaces Cauchy spaces and convergence spaces The characteristic that unites the concept in all of these examples is that limits of nets and filters when they exist are unique for separated spaces or unique up to topological indistinguishability for preregular spaces As it turns out uniform spaces and more generally Cauchy spaces are always preregular so the Hausdorff condition in these cases reduces to the T0 condition These are also the spaces in which completeness makes sense and Hausdorffness is a natural companion to completeness in these cases Specifically a space is complete if and only if every Cauchy net has at least one limit while a space is Hausdorff if and only if every Cauchy net has at most one limit since only Cauchy nets can have limits in the first place Algebra of functions editThe algebra of continuous real or complex functions on a compact Hausdorff space is a commutative C algebra and conversely by the Banach Stone theorem one can recover the topology of the space from the algebraic properties of its algebra of continuous functions This leads to noncommutative geometry where one considers noncommutative C algebras as representing algebras of functions on a noncommutative space Academic humour editHausdorff condition is illustrated by the pun that in Hausdorff spaces any two points can be housed off from each other by open sets 13 In the Mathematics Institute of the University of Bonn in which Felix Hausdorff researched and lectured there is a certain room designated the Hausdorff Raum This is a pun as Raum means both room and space in German See also editFixed point space Topological space such that every endomorphism has a fixed point a Hausdorff space X such that every continuous function f X X has a fixed point Locally Hausdorff space Non Hausdorff manifold generalization of manifoldsPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Quasitopological space a set X equipped with a function that associates to every compact Hausdorff space K a collection of maps K C satisfying certain natural conditionsPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Separation axiom Axioms in topology defining notions of separation Weak Hausdorff space concept in algebraic topologyPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallbackNotes edit Hausdorff space Definition amp Meaning www dictionary com Retrieved 15 June 2022 a b Separation axioms in nLab ncatlab org a b Willard 2004 pp 86 87 Bourbaki 1966 p 75 See for instance Lp space Lp spaces and Lebesgue integrals Banach Mazur compactum etc van Douwen Eric K 1993 An anti Hausdorff Frechet space in which convergent sequences have unique limits Topology and Its Applications 51 2 147 158 doi 10 1016 0166 8641 93 90147 6 Wilansky Albert 1967 Between T1 and T2 The American Mathematical Monthly 74 3 261 266 doi 10 2307 2316017 JSTOR 2316017 Shimrat M 1956 Decomposition spaces and separation properties Quarterly Journal of Mathematics 2 128 129 doi 10 1093 qmath 7 1 128 Willard 2004 pp 124 Schechter 1996 17 14 d p 460 Locally compact preregular spaces are completely regular math stackexchange com Schechter 1996 17 7 g p 457 Adams Colin Franzosa Robert 2008 Introduction to Topology Pure and Applied Pearson Prentice Hall p 42 ISBN 978 0 13 184869 6 References editArkhangelskii A V Pontryagin L S 1990 General Topology I Springer ISBN 3 540 18178 4 Bourbaki 1966 Elements of Mathematics General Topology Addison Wesley Hausdorff space Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press 2001 1994 Schechter Eric 1996 Handbook of Analysis and Its Foundations San Diego CA Academic Press ISBN 978 0 12 622760 4 OCLC 175294365 Willard Stephen 2004 General Topology Dover Publications ISBN 0 486 43479 6 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hausdorff space amp oldid 1183068747, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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