Hausdorff space: Difference between revisions
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==Definition== | ==Definition== | ||
===Equivalent definitions in tabular format | ===Equivalent definitions in tabular format=== | ||
A [[topological space]] is said to be '''Hausdorff''' if it satisfies the following equivalent conditions: | A [[topological space]] is said to be '''Hausdorff''' if it satisfies the following equivalent conditions: | ||
Revision as of 20:42, 18 June 2011
Please also read the Topospaces Convention page: Convention:Hausdorffness assumption
Definition
Equivalent definitions in tabular format
A topological space is said to be Hausdorff if it satisfies the following equivalent conditions:
| No. | Shorthand | A topological space is termed Hausdorff if ... | A topological space is termed Hausdorff if ... |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Separation axiom | given any two distinct points in the topological space, there are disjoint open sets containing the two points respectively. | given any two points , there exist open subsets and such that is empty |
| 2 | Diagonal in square | the diagonal is closed in the product of the space with itself | in the product space , endowed with the product topology, the diagonal, viz., the subset given by is a closed subset |
| 3 | Ultrafilter convergence | every ultrafilter of subsets converges to at most one point | if is an ultrafilter of subsets of , then there is at most one for which . |
Examples
Extreme examples
- The empty space is considered a Hausdorff space. For this space, the Hausdorffness condition is vacuously satisfied.
- The one-point space is considered a Hausdorff space. For this space, the Hausdorffness condition is vacuously satisfied.
- Any discrete space (i.e., a topological space with the discrete topology) is considered a Hausdorff space.
Typical examples
- Euclidean space, and more generally, any manifold, closed subset of Euclidean space, and any subset of Euclidean space is Hausdorff.
- Any metric space is Hausdorff in the induced topology, i.e., any metrizable space is Hausdorff.
Non-examples
- The spectrum of a commutative unital ring is generally not Hausdorff under the Zariski topology.
- The etale space of continuous functions, and more general etale spaces, are usually not Hausdorff.
This article defines a property of topological space that is pivotal (viz important) among currently studied properties of topological spaces
In the T family (properties of topological spaces related to separation axioms), this is called: T2
This article is about a basic definition in topology.
VIEW: Definitions built on this | Facts about this | Survey articles about this
View a complete list of basic definitions in topology
For survey articles related to this, refer: Category:Survey articles related to Hausdorffness
Relation with other properties
This property is a pivotal (important) member of its property space. Its variations, opposites, and other properties related to it and defined using it are often studied
Stronger properties
Weaker properties
Metaproperties
| Metaproperty name | Satisfied? | Proof | Statement with symbols |
|---|---|---|---|
| product-closed property of topological spaces | Yes | Hausdorffness is product-closed | If is a (finite or infinite) collection of Hausdorff topological spaces, the product of all the s, equipped with the product topology, is also Hausdorff. |
| box product-closed property of topological spaces | Yes | Hausdorffness is box product-closed | If is a (finite or infinite) collection of Hausdorff topological spaces, the product of all the s, equipped with the box topology, is also Hausdorff. |
| subspace-hereditary property of topological spaces | Yes | Hausdorffness is hereditary | Suppose is a Hausdorff space and is a subset of . Under the subspace topology, is also Hausdorff. |
| refining-preserved property of topological spaces | Yes | Hausdorffness is refining-preserved | Suppose and are two topologies on a set , such that , i.e., every subset of open with respect to is also open with respect to . Then, if is Hausdorff with respect to , it is also Hausdorff with respect to . |
References
Textbook references
- Topology (2nd edition) by James R. MunkresMore info, Page 98, Chapter 2, Section 17 (formal definition)
- Lecture Notes on Elementary Topology and Geometry (Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics) by I. M. Singer and J. A. ThorpeMore info, Page 26 (formal definition)