Hausdorff space: Difference between revisions

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{{surveyarticles|[[:Category:Survey articles related to Hausdorffness]]}}
{{surveyarticles|[[:Category:Survey articles related to Hausdorffness]]}}


''Please also read the Topospace Convention page:'' [[Convention:Hausdorffness assumption]]
==Definition==
==Definition==



Revision as of 20:13, 13 January 2008

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

Please also read the Topospace Convention page: Convention:Hausdorffness assumption

Definition

A topological space is said to be Hausdorff if given any two points in the topological space, there are disjoint open sets containing the two points respectively.

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

Products

This property of topological spaces is closed under taking arbitrary products
View all properties of topological spaces closed under products

An arbitrary (finite or infinite) product of Hausdorff spaces is Hausdorff. For full proof, refer: Hausdorffness is product-closed

Hereditariness

This property of topological spaces is hereditary, or subspace-closed. In other words, any subspace (subset with the subspace topology) of a topological space with this property also has this property.
View other subspace-hereditary properties of topological spaces

Any subspace of a Hausdorff space is Hausdorff. For full proof, refer: Hausdorffness is hereditary

Refining

This property of topological spaces is preserved under refining, viz, if a set with a given topology has the property, the same set with a finer topology also has the property
View all refining-preserved properties of topological spaces OR View all coarsening-preserved properties of topological spaces

Moving to a finer topology increases the number of possible open sets to choose from, and hence, preserves the property of Hausdorffness.

External links

Definition links