Compactness axioms: Difference between revisions
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imported>Richard Pinch (comment on terminology) |
imported>Richard Pinch (moved references to bibliography) |
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* '''Orthocompact''' if every cover by open sets has an interior preserving open refinement. | * '''Orthocompact''' if every cover by open sets has an interior preserving open refinement. | ||
* '''σ-compact''' if it is the union of countably many compact subspaces. | * '''σ-compact''' if it is the union of countably many compact subspaces. | ||
Revision as of 15:08, 2 November 2008
In general topology, the important property of compactness has a number of related properties.
The definitions require some preliminary terminology. A cover of a set X is a family such that the union is equal to X. A subcover is a subfamily which is again a cover where B is a subset of A. A refinement is a cover such that for each β in B there is an α in A such that . A cover is finite or countable if the index set is finite or countable. The phrase "open cover"is often used to denote "cover by open sets".
Definitions
We say that a topological space X is
- Compact if every cover by open sets has a finite subcover.
- Countably compact if every countable cover by open sets has a finite subcover.
- Lindelöf if every cover by open sets has a countable subcover.
- Sequentially compact if every convergent sequence has a convergent subsequence.
- Paracompact if every cover by open sets has an open locally finite refinement.
- Metacompact if every cover by open sets has a point finite open refinement.
- Orthocompact if every cover by open sets has an interior preserving open refinement.
- σ-compact if it is the union of countably many compact subspaces.