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Topological property

In topology and related areas of mathematics, a topological property or topological invariant is a property of a topological space that is invariant under homeomorphisms. Alternatively, a topological property is a proper class of topological spaces which is closed under homeomorphisms. That is, a property of spaces is a topological property if whenever a space X possesses that property every space homeomorphic to X possesses that property. Informally, a topological property is a property of the space that can be expressed using open sets.

A common problem in topology is to decide whether two topological spaces are homeomorphic or not. To prove that two spaces are not homeomorphic, it is sufficient to find a topological property which is not shared by them.

Properties of topological properties edit

A property   is:

  • Hereditary, if for every topological space   and subset   the subspace   has property  
  • Weakly hereditary, if for every topological space   and closed subset   the subspace   has property  

Common topological properties edit

Cardinal functions edit

  • The cardinality   of the space  .
  • The cardinality   of the topology (the set of open subsets) of the space  .
  • Weight  , the least cardinality of a basis of the topology of the space  .
  • Density  , the least cardinality of a subset of   whose closure is  .

Separation edit

Some of these terms are defined differently in older mathematical literature; see history of the separation axioms.

  • T0 or Kolmogorov. A space is Kolmogorov if for every pair of distinct points x and y in the space, there is at least either an open set containing x but not y, or an open set containing y but not x.
  • T1 or Fréchet. A space is Fréchet if for every pair of distinct points x and y in the space, there is an open set containing x but not y. (Compare with T0; here, we are allowed to specify which point will be contained in the open set.) Equivalently, a space is T1 if all its singletons are closed. T1 spaces are always T0.
  • Sober. A space is sober if every irreducible closed set C has a unique generic point p. In other words, if C is not the (possibly nondisjoint) union of two smaller closed non-empty subsets, then there is a p such that the closure of {p} equals C, and p is the only point with this property.
  • T2 or Hausdorff. A space is Hausdorff if every two distinct points have disjoint neighbourhoods. T2 spaces are always T1.
  • T or Urysohn. A space is Urysohn if every two distinct points have disjoint closed neighbourhoods. T spaces are always T2.
  • Completely T2 or completely Hausdorff. A space is completely T2 if every two distinct points are separated by a function. Every completely Hausdorff space is Urysohn.
  • Regular. A space is regular if whenever C is a closed set and p is a point not in C, then C and p have disjoint neighbourhoods.
  • T3 or Regular Hausdorff. A space is regular Hausdorff if it is a regular T0 space. (A regular space is Hausdorff if and only if it is T0, so the terminology is consistent.)
  • Completely regular. A space is completely regular if whenever C is a closed set and p is a point not in C, then C and {p} are separated by a function.
  • T, Tychonoff, Completely regular Hausdorff or Completely T3. A Tychonoff space is a completely regular T0 space. (A completely regular space is Hausdorff if and only if it is T0, so the terminology is consistent.) Tychonoff spaces are always regular Hausdorff.
  • Normal. A space is normal if any two disjoint closed sets have disjoint neighbourhoods. Normal spaces admit partitions of unity.
  • T4 or Normal Hausdorff. A normal space is Hausdorff if and only if it is T1. Normal Hausdorff spaces are always Tychonoff.
  • Completely normal. A space is completely normal if any two separated sets have disjoint neighbourhoods.
  • T5 or Completely normal Hausdorff. A completely normal space is Hausdorff if and only if it is T1. Completely normal Hausdorff spaces are always normal Hausdorff.
  • Perfectly normal. A space is perfectly normal if any two disjoint closed sets are precisely separated by a function. A perfectly normal space must also be completely normal.
  • T6 or Perfectly normal Hausdorff, or perfectly T4. A space is perfectly normal Hausdorff, if it is both perfectly normal and T1. A perfectly normal Hausdorff space must also be completely normal Hausdorff.
  • Discrete space. A space is discrete if all of its points are completely isolated, i.e. if any subset is open.
  • Number of isolated points. The number of isolated points of a topological space.

Countability conditions edit

Connectedness edit

  • Connected. A space is connected if it is not the union of a pair of disjoint non-empty open sets. Equivalently, a space is connected if the only clopen sets are the empty set and itself.
  • Locally connected. A space is locally connected if every point has a local base consisting of connected sets.
  • Totally disconnected. A space is totally disconnected if it has no connected subset with more than one point.
  • Path-connected. A space X is path-connected if for every two points x, y in X, there is a path p from x to y, i.e., a continuous map p: [0,1] → X with p(0) = x and p(1) = y. Path-connected spaces are always connected.
  • Locally path-connected. A space is locally path-connected if every point has a local base consisting of path-connected sets. A locally path-connected space is connected if and only if it is path-connected.
  • Arc-connected. A space X is arc-connected if for every two points x, y in X, there is an arc f from x to y, i.e., an injective continuous map   with   and  . Arc-connected spaces are path-connected.
  • Simply connected. A space X is simply connected if it is path-connected and every continuous map   is homotopic to a constant map.
  • Locally simply connected. A space X is locally simply connected if every point x in X has a local base of neighborhoods U that is simply connected.
  • Semi-locally simply connected. A space X is semi-locally simply connected if every point has a local base of neighborhoods U such that every loop in U is contractible in X. Semi-local simple connectivity, a strictly weaker condition than local simple connectivity, is a necessary condition for the existence of a universal cover.
  • Contractible. A space X is contractible if the identity map on X is homotopic to a constant map. Contractible spaces are always simply connected.
  • Hyperconnected. A space is hyperconnected if no two non-empty open sets are disjoint. Every hyperconnected space is connected.
  • Ultraconnected. A space is ultraconnected if no two non-empty closed sets are disjoint. Every ultraconnected space is path-connected.
  • Indiscrete or trivial. A space is indiscrete if the only open sets are the empty set and itself. Such a space is said to have the trivial topology.

Compactness edit

  • Compact. A space is compact if every open cover has a finite subcover. Some authors call these spaces quasicompact and reserve compact for Hausdorff spaces where every open cover has finite subcover. Compact spaces are always Lindelöf and paracompact. Compact Hausdorff spaces are therefore normal.
  • Sequentially compact. A space is sequentially compact if every sequence has a convergent subsequence.
  • Countably compact. A space is countably compact if every countable open cover has a finite subcover.
  • Pseudocompact. A space is pseudocompact if every continuous real-valued function on the space is bounded.
  • σ-compact. A space is σ-compact if it is the union of countably many compact subsets.
  • Lindelöf. A space is Lindelöf if every open cover has a countable subcover.
  • Paracompact. A space is paracompact if every open cover has an open locally finite refinement. Paracompact Hausdorff spaces are normal.
  • Locally compact. A space is locally compact if every point has a local base consisting of compact neighbourhoods. Slightly different definitions are also used. Locally compact Hausdorff spaces are always Tychonoff.
  • Ultraconnected compact. In an ultra-connected compact space X every open cover must contain X itself. Non-empty ultra-connected compact spaces have a largest proper open subset called a monolith.

Metrizability edit

  • Metrizable. A space is metrizable if it is homeomorphic to a metric space. Metrizable spaces are always Hausdorff and paracompact (and hence normal and Tychonoff), and first-countable. Moreover, a topological space   is said to be metrizable if there exists a metric for   such that the metric topology   is identical with the topology  
  • Polish. A space is called Polish if it is metrizable with a separable and complete metric.
  • Locally metrizable. A space is locally metrizable if every point has a metrizable neighbourhood.

Miscellaneous edit

  • Baire space. A space X is a Baire space if it is not meagre in itself. Equivalently, X is a Baire space if the intersection of countably many dense open sets is dense.
  • Door space. A topological space is a door space if every subset is open or closed (or both).
  • Topological Homogeneity. A space X is (topologically) homogeneous if for every x and y in X there is a homeomorphism   such that   Intuitively speaking, this means that the space looks the same at every point. All topological groups are homogeneous.
  • Finitely generated or Alexandrov. A space X is Alexandrov if arbitrary intersections of open sets in X are open, or equivalently if arbitrary unions of closed sets are closed. These are precisely the finitely generated members of the category of topological spaces and continuous maps.
  • Zero-dimensional. A space is zero-dimensional if it has a base of clopen sets. These are precisely the spaces with a small inductive dimension of 0.
  • Almost discrete. A space is almost discrete if every open set is closed (hence clopen). The almost discrete spaces are precisely the finitely generated zero-dimensional spaces.
  • Boolean. A space is Boolean if it is zero-dimensional, compact and Hausdorff (equivalently, totally disconnected, compact and Hausdorff). These are precisely the spaces that are homeomorphic to the Stone spaces of Boolean algebras.
  • Reidemeister torsion
  •  -resolvable. A space is said to be κ-resolvable[1] (respectively: almost κ-resolvable) if it contains κ dense sets that are pairwise disjoint (respectively: almost disjoint over the ideal of nowhere dense subsets). If the space is not  -resolvable then it is called  -irresolvable.
  • Maximally resolvable. Space   is maximally resolvable if it is  -resolvable, where   Number   is called dispersion character of  
  • Strongly discrete. Set   is strongly discrete subset of the space   if the points in   may be separated by pairwise disjoint neighborhoods. Space   is said to be strongly discrete if every non-isolated point of   is the accumulation point of some strongly discrete set.

Non-topological properties edit

There are many examples of properties of metric spaces, etc, which are not topological properties. To show a property   is not topological, it is sufficient to find two homeomorphic topological spaces   such that   has  , but   does not have  .

For example, the metric space properties of boundedness and completeness are not topological properties. Let   and   be metric spaces with the standard metric. Then,   via the homeomorphism  . However,   is complete but not bounded, while   is bounded but not complete.

See also edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Juhász, István; Soukup, Lajos; Szentmiklóssy, Zoltán (2008). "Resolvability and monotone normality". Israel Journal of Mathematics. 166 (1): 1–16. arXiv:math/0609092. doi:10.1007/s11856-008-1017-y. ISSN 0021-2172. S2CID 14743623.

References edit

[2] Simon Moulieras, Maciej Lewenstein and Graciana Puentes, Entanglement engineering and topological protection by discrete-time quantum walks, Journal of Physics B: Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics 46 (10), 104005 (2013). https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/0953-4075/46/10/104005/pdf

topological, property, topology, related, areas, mathematics, topological, property, topological, invariant, property, topological, space, that, invariant, under, homeomorphisms, alternatively, topological, property, proper, class, topological, spaces, which, . In topology and related areas of mathematics a topological property or topological invariant is a property of a topological space that is invariant under homeomorphisms Alternatively a topological property is a proper class of topological spaces which is closed under homeomorphisms That is a property of spaces is a topological property if whenever a space X possesses that property every space homeomorphic to X possesses that property Informally a topological property is a property of the space that can be expressed using open sets A common problem in topology is to decide whether two topological spaces are homeomorphic or not To prove that two spaces are not homeomorphic it is sufficient to find a topological property which is not shared by them Contents 1 Properties of topological properties 2 Common topological properties 2 1 Cardinal functions 2 2 Separation 2 3 Countability conditions 2 4 Connectedness 2 5 Compactness 2 6 Metrizability 2 7 Miscellaneous 3 Non topological properties 4 See also 5 Citations 6 ReferencesProperties of topological properties editA property P displaystyle P nbsp is Hereditary if for every topological space X T displaystyle X mathcal T nbsp and subset S X displaystyle S subseteq X nbsp the subspace S T S displaystyle left S mathcal T S right nbsp has property P displaystyle P nbsp Weakly hereditary if for every topological space X T displaystyle X mathcal T nbsp and closed subset S X displaystyle S subseteq X nbsp the subspace S T S displaystyle left S mathcal T S right nbsp has property P displaystyle P nbsp Common topological properties editCardinal functions edit Main article Cardinal function Cardinal functions in topology The cardinality X displaystyle vert X vert nbsp of the space X displaystyle X nbsp The cardinality t X displaystyle vert tau X vert nbsp of the topology the set of open subsets of the space X displaystyle X nbsp Weight w X displaystyle w X nbsp the least cardinality of a basis of the topology of the space X displaystyle X nbsp Density d X displaystyle d X nbsp the least cardinality of a subset of X displaystyle X nbsp whose closure is X displaystyle X nbsp Separation edit Main article Separation axiom Some of these terms are defined differently in older mathematical literature see history of the separation axioms T0 or Kolmogorov A space is Kolmogorov if for every pair of distinct points x and y in the space there is at least either an open set containing x but not y or an open set containing y but not x T1 or Frechet A space is Frechet if for every pair of distinct points x and y in the space there is an open set containing x but not y Compare with T0 here we are allowed to specify which point will be contained in the open set Equivalently a space is T1 if all its singletons are closed T1 spaces are always T0 Sober A space is sober if every irreducible closed set C has a unique generic point p In other words if C is not the possibly nondisjoint union of two smaller closed non empty subsets then there is a p such that the closure of p equals C and p is the only point with this property T2 or Hausdorff A space is Hausdorff if every two distinct points have disjoint neighbourhoods T2 spaces are always T1 T2 or Urysohn A space is Urysohn if every two distinct points have disjoint closed neighbourhoods T2 spaces are always T2 Completely T2 or completely Hausdorff A space is completely T2 if every two distinct points are separated by a function Every completely Hausdorff space is Urysohn Regular A space is regular if whenever C is a closed set and p is a point not in C then C and p have disjoint neighbourhoods T3 or Regular Hausdorff A space is regular Hausdorff if it is a regular T0 space A regular space is Hausdorff if and only if it is T0 so the terminology is consistent Completely regular A space is completely regular if whenever C is a closed set and p is a point not in C then C and p are separated by a function T3 Tychonoff Completely regular Hausdorff or Completely T3 A Tychonoff space is a completely regular T0 space A completely regular space is Hausdorff if and only if it is T0 so the terminology is consistent Tychonoff spaces are always regular Hausdorff Normal A space is normal if any two disjoint closed sets have disjoint neighbourhoods Normal spaces admit partitions of unity T4 or Normal Hausdorff A normal space is Hausdorff if and only if it is T1 Normal Hausdorff spaces are always Tychonoff Completely normal A space is completely normal if any two separated sets have disjoint neighbourhoods T5 or Completely normal Hausdorff A completely normal space is Hausdorff if and only if it is T1 Completely normal Hausdorff spaces are always normal Hausdorff Perfectly normal A space is perfectly normal if any two disjoint closed sets are precisely separated by a function A perfectly normal space must also be completely normal T6 or Perfectly normal Hausdorff or perfectly T4 A space is perfectly normal Hausdorff if it is both perfectly normal and T1 A perfectly normal Hausdorff space must also be completely normal Hausdorff Discrete space A space is discrete if all of its points are completely isolated i e if any subset is open Number of isolated points The number of isolated points of a topological space Countability conditions edit See also Axiom of countability Separable A space is separable if it has a countable dense subset First countable A space is first countable if every point has a countable local base Second countable A space is second countable if it has a countable base for its topology Second countable spaces are always separable first countable and Lindelof Connectedness edit Connected A space is connected if it is not the union of a pair of disjoint non empty open sets Equivalently a space is connected if the only clopen sets are the empty set and itself Locally connected A space is locally connected if every point has a local base consisting of connected sets Totally disconnected A space is totally disconnected if it has no connected subset with more than one point Path connected A space X is path connected if for every two points x y in X there is a path p from x to y i e a continuous map p 0 1 X with p 0 x and p 1 y Path connected spaces are always connected Locally path connected A space is locally path connected if every point has a local base consisting of path connected sets A locally path connected space is connected if and only if it is path connected Arc connected A space X is arc connected if for every two points x y in X there is an arc f from x to y i e an injective continuous map f 0 1 X displaystyle f colon 0 1 to X nbsp with p 0 x displaystyle p 0 x nbsp and p 1 y displaystyle p 1 y nbsp Arc connected spaces are path connected Simply connected A space X is simply connected if it is path connected and every continuous map f S 1 X displaystyle f colon S 1 to X nbsp is homotopic to a constant map Locally simply connected A space X is locally simply connected if every point x in X has a local base of neighborhoods U that is simply connected Semi locally simply connected A space X is semi locally simply connected if every point has a local base of neighborhoods U such that every loop in U is contractible in X Semi local simple connectivity a strictly weaker condition than local simple connectivity is a necessary condition for the existence of a universal cover Contractible A space X is contractible if the identity map on X is homotopic to a constant map Contractible spaces are always simply connected Hyperconnected A space is hyperconnected if no two non empty open sets are disjoint Every hyperconnected space is connected Ultraconnected A space is ultraconnected if no two non empty closed sets are disjoint Every ultraconnected space is path connected Indiscrete or trivial A space is indiscrete if the only open sets are the empty set and itself Such a space is said to have the trivial topology Compactness edit Compact A space is compact if every open cover has a finite subcover Some authors call these spaces quasicompact and reserve compact for Hausdorff spaces where every open cover has finite subcover Compact spaces are always Lindelof and paracompact Compact Hausdorff spaces are therefore normal Sequentially compact A space is sequentially compact if every sequence has a convergent subsequence Countably compact A space is countably compact if every countable open cover has a finite subcover Pseudocompact A space is pseudocompact if every continuous real valued function on the space is bounded s compact A space is s compact if it is the union of countably many compact subsets Lindelof A space is Lindelof if every open cover has a countable subcover Paracompact A space is paracompact if every open cover has an open locally finite refinement Paracompact Hausdorff spaces are normal Locally compact A space is locally compact if every point has a local base consisting of compact neighbourhoods Slightly different definitions are also used Locally compact Hausdorff spaces are always Tychonoff Ultraconnected compact In an ultra connected compact space X every open cover must contain X itself Non empty ultra connected compact spaces have a largest proper open subset called a monolith Metrizability edit Metrizable A space is metrizable if it is homeomorphic to a metric space Metrizable spaces are always Hausdorff and paracompact and hence normal and Tychonoff and first countable Moreover a topological space X T displaystyle X T nbsp is said to be metrizable if there exists a metric for X displaystyle X nbsp such that the metric topology T d displaystyle T d nbsp is identical with the topology T displaystyle T nbsp Polish A space is called Polish if it is metrizable with a separable and complete metric Locally metrizable A space is locally metrizable if every point has a metrizable neighbourhood Miscellaneous edit Baire space A space X is a Baire space if it is not meagre in itself Equivalently X is a Baire space if the intersection of countably many dense open sets is dense Door space A topological space is a door space if every subset is open or closed or both Topological Homogeneity A space X is topologically homogeneous if for every x and y in X there is a homeomorphism f X X displaystyle f colon X to X nbsp such that f x y displaystyle f x y nbsp Intuitively speaking this means that the space looks the same at every point All topological groups are homogeneous Finitely generated or Alexandrov A space X is Alexandrov if arbitrary intersections of open sets in X are open or equivalently if arbitrary unions of closed sets are closed These are precisely the finitely generated members of the category of topological spaces and continuous maps Zero dimensional A space is zero dimensional if it has a base of clopen sets These are precisely the spaces with a small inductive dimension of 0 Almost discrete A space is almost discrete if every open set is closed hence clopen The almost discrete spaces are precisely the finitely generated zero dimensional spaces Boolean A space is Boolean if it is zero dimensional compact and Hausdorff equivalently totally disconnected compact and Hausdorff These are precisely the spaces that are homeomorphic to the Stone spaces of Boolean algebras Reidemeister torsion k displaystyle kappa nbsp resolvable A space is said to be k resolvable 1 respectively almost k resolvable if it contains k dense sets that are pairwise disjoint respectively almost disjoint over the ideal of nowhere dense subsets If the space is not k displaystyle kappa nbsp resolvable then it is called k displaystyle kappa nbsp irresolvable Maximally resolvable Space X displaystyle X nbsp is maximally resolvable if it is D X displaystyle Delta X nbsp resolvable where D X min G G G is open displaystyle Delta X min G G neq varnothing G mbox is open nbsp Number D X displaystyle Delta X nbsp is called dispersion character of X displaystyle X nbsp Strongly discrete Set D displaystyle D nbsp is strongly discrete subset of the space X displaystyle X nbsp if the points in D displaystyle D nbsp may be separated by pairwise disjoint neighborhoods Space X displaystyle X nbsp is said to be strongly discrete if every non isolated point of X displaystyle X nbsp is the accumulation point of some strongly discrete set Non topological properties editThere are many examples of properties of metric spaces etc which are not topological properties To show a property P displaystyle P nbsp is not topological it is sufficient to find two homeomorphic topological spaces X Y displaystyle X cong Y nbsp such that X displaystyle X nbsp has P displaystyle P nbsp but Y displaystyle Y nbsp does not have P displaystyle P nbsp For example the metric space properties of boundedness and completeness are not topological properties Let X R displaystyle X mathbb R nbsp and Y p 2 p 2 displaystyle Y tfrac pi 2 tfrac pi 2 nbsp be metric spaces with the standard metric Then X Y displaystyle X cong Y nbsp via the homeomorphism arctan X Y displaystyle operatorname arctan colon X to Y nbsp However X displaystyle X nbsp is complete but not bounded while Y displaystyle Y nbsp is bounded but not complete See also editThis article is in list format but may read better as prose You can help by converting this article if appropriate Editing help is available March 2017 Characteristic class Association of cohomology classes to principal bundles Characteristic numbers Association of cohomology classes to principal bundlesPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Chern class Characteristic classes of vector bundles Euler characteristic Topological invariant in mathematics Fixed point property Mathematical property Homology and cohomology Homotopy group and Cohomotopy group Knot invariant Function of a knot that takes the same value for equivalent knots Linking number Numerical invariant that describes the linking of two closed curves in three dimensional space List of topologies List of concrete topologies and topological spaces Quantum invariant Concept in mathematical knot theory Topological quantum number Physical quantities that take discrete values because of topological quantum physical effects Winding number Number of times a curve wraps around a point in the planeCitations edit Juhasz Istvan Soukup Lajos Szentmiklossy Zoltan 2008 Resolvability and monotone normality Israel Journal of Mathematics 166 1 1 16 arXiv math 0609092 doi 10 1007 s11856 008 1017 y ISSN 0021 2172 S2CID 14743623 References editWillard Stephen 1970 General topology Reading Mass Addison Wesley Pub Co p 369 ISBN 9780486434797 Munkres James R 2000 Topology Prentice Hall ISBN 0 13 181629 2 2 Simon Moulieras Maciej Lewenstein and Graciana Puentes Entanglement engineering and topological protection by discrete time quantum walks Journal of Physics B Atomic Molecular and Optical Physics 46 10 104005 2013 https iopscience iop org article 10 1088 0953 4075 46 10 104005 pdf Retrieved from https en 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