First-countable implies compactly generated

From Topospaces
Revision as of 00:25, 22 July 2008 by Vipul (talk | contribs)

This article gives the statement and possibly, proof, of an implication relation between two topological space properties. That is, it states that every topological space satisfying the first topological space property must also satisfy the second topological space property
View all topological space property implications | View all topological space property non-implications
|

Property "Page" (as page type) with input value "{{{stronger}}}" contains invalid characters or is incomplete and therefore can cause unexpected results during a query or annotation process.Property "Page" (as page type) with input value "{{{weaker}}}" contains invalid characters or is incomplete and therefore can cause unexpected results during a query or annotation process.

Statement

Property-theoretic statement

The property of topological spaces of being first-countable is stronger than the property of being compactly generated.

Verbal statement

Any first-countable space is compactly generated.

Proof

Given: A first-countable space

To prove: There exists a collection of compact subsets of , such that is open if and only if is open in for every

Construction of the collection of compact subsets

We consider compact subsets of the following form: take a sequence that converges to a point (note that a sequence may converge to more than one point, we just make sure there is at least one point of convergence). Now define the compact set corresponding to this sequence as .

Let's see why is compact. First, observe that by construction, any open set of containing must contain all but finitely many . Hence, if we have an open cover of , the member of the open cover containing must contain all but finitely many of the s. Picking one member of the open cover for each , we obtain a finite subcover.

Proof that this collection works

Given: A subset of , such that is open in for every of the above form.

To prove: is open in

Proof: Suppose is not open. We want to show that for every , there exists an open subset of containing and inside .

Since is first-countable, we can find, for any point , a descending chain of open subsets containing , such that every open set containing contains one of the s.