A topological space is limit point compact if every infinite subset has a limit point (in the sense of Definition 2.3 there, i.e., an accumulation point).
Under classical logic, there are several tautologously equivalent ways of formulating the definition. Let us first recall that points of a closed subset of a space are either isolated (meaning that for some neighborhood of we have ) or not; in the latter case we say is a limit point or accumulation point of . More generally, for any subset , a limit point of is defined to be a limit point of its closure .
Thus, a subset has no limit point iff every point of is isolated, in other words iff equipped with the subspace topology is a discrete space. In view of this, an equivalent definition of limit point compactness is:
Another characterization focuses in on countability: if there are no infinite closed discrete spaces, then obviously there are no countably infinite closed discrete spaces. Conversely, if there is an infinite closed discrete subspace of , then because any countably infinite subset of is also closed and discrete in , we can say that is not limit point compact iff there exists an infinite closed discrete subspace iff there exists a countably infinite closed discrete subspace. It follows that another characterization of limit point compactness is
Every countably infinite set has a limit point, or
Every countable closed discrete subspace is finite.
Limit point compactness is closely related to countable compactness. Indeed, every countably compact space is limit point compact; in the converse direction, every limit point compact space satisfying the separation axiom (namely, that points are closed) is also countably compact. For this reason, limit point compact spaces are also known as “weakly countably compact spaces”. See countably compact space for further details.
For a metrizable space , the following are equivalent:
The term “limit point compact” was invented by James Munkres as he was writing his famous text on point-set topology. He writes that other terms that have appeared in the literature are “Bolzano-Weierstrass compactness” and “Fréchet compactness”.
Last revised on July 28, 2018 at 18:46:37. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.