topology (point-set topology, point-free topology)
see also differential topology, algebraic topology, functional analysis and topological homotopy theory
Basic concepts
fiber space, space attachment
Extra stuff, structure, properties
Kolmogorov space, Hausdorff space, regular space, normal space
sequentially compact, countably compact, locally compact, sigma-compact, paracompact, countably paracompact, strongly compact
Examples
Basic statements
closed subspaces of compact Hausdorff spaces are equivalently compact subspaces
open subspaces of compact Hausdorff spaces are locally compact
compact spaces equivalently have converging subnet of every net
continuous metric space valued function on compact metric space is uniformly continuous
paracompact Hausdorff spaces equivalently admit subordinate partitions of unity
injective proper maps to locally compact spaces are equivalently the closed embeddings
locally compact and second-countable spaces are sigma-compact
Theorems
Analysis Theorems
A space (with “space” taken in a sense relevant to the field of topology) is complete (or Cauchy-complete) if every sequence, net, or filter that should converge really does converge. We identify the sequences, nets, or filters that “should” converge as the Cauchy ones.
A space that is not complete has “gaps” that may be filled to form its completion; it is rather natural to make the space (or equivalently its underlying topological space) Hausdorff at the same time. Forming the completion of a Hausdorff space is an important example of completion in the general abstract sense.
A space (which may be a metric space, a Cauchy space, or anything in between) is Cauchy-complete, or simply complete, if every Cauchy filter converges, equivalently if every Cauchy net converges. A space is sequentially Cauchy-complete if every Cauchy sequence converges. Note that a sequentially complete metric space must be complete (in classical mathematics), but this does not hold for more general spaces (nor even for metric spaces in constructive mathematics).
A space is topologically complete if its underlying topological space is completely metrizable. There are various other notions related to this. See topologically complete space.
The set of Cauchy filters on a space may generally be given the same sort of structure as itself has, and this space will be complete. Exactly how to do this depends on what structure is supposed to have, of course, and one can make the general statement false by requiring something artificial as the structure in question, most extremely the structure of being a specific non-complete space. But it works for most natural categories of spaces.
The general idea is this: every point in generates a principal ultrafilter (consisting of those sets to which the point belongs), so there is a natural map from to . Furthermore, this map is a morphism of the appropriate structure, which in particular makes it Cauchy-continuous (preserving Cauchy filters) and continuous (preserving limits). So all of the limits in still exist in , but now each Cauchy filter in (having become both a Cauchy filter in and a point in ) has a limit as well. The additional Cauchy filters based on the additional points in will also have a limit in , essentially because is a monad (so a Cauchy filter of Cauchy filters folds into a single Cauchy filter).
There is a problem that is rather larger than necessary; for example, all of the filters that converge to a given point in (not just the free ultrafilter at that point) exist in and converge to one another. But you can take a quotient of to make it Hausdorff, obtaining the Hausdorff completion of . In case was not Hausdorff to begin with, one can sometimes also force the quotient to leave in just as much redundancy as has but no more, obtain a straight completion of . But really, it's most natural to make the space Hausdorff at the same time.
Details to come, if I get around to it.
We have a picture like this, where is the original space, gives a Hausdorff quotient, and an overline indicates completion:
(Here the arrows are drawn horizontally to put styles on them; they should all be diagonal in the only possible way.)
At least if is a metric space, then we can also construct its completion as a locale, the localic completion, whose spatial part is the above space, but which in constructive mathematics may not be spatial. This is useful to have even if is already complete.
A compact space is necessarily complete. A space is called precompact if its completion is compact. For metric spaces (or even uniform spaces), there is a natural notion of a totally bounded space; in classical mathematics, we have the theorem that a space is totally bounded if and only if it is precompact. Similarly, a space is compact if and only if it is both complete and totally bounded (or in constructive mathematics, both complete and precompact). Thus the purely topological property of compactness is the conjunction of the nontopological properties of completeness and total boundedness.
In some constructive approaches to analysis (including most of Brouwer's school and some of Bishop's school), ‘complete and totally bounded’ is taken as the definition of ‘compact’, because it holds of examples such as the unit interval that fail to be compact (in the usual sense) without the fan theorem. However, in this case, compactness is no longer a topological property; see Bishop-compact space for more information. This is reconciled somewhat with the theory of localic completion, in which a uniform space is totally bounded if and only if its localic completion is compact (in the usual sense).
Every complete metric space is a Baire space. Since being a Baire space is a topological property, it follows that every topologically complete space is a Baire space.
There is also a topological property of Čech-completeness? that is related to this; in particular, a metric space is Čech-complete if and only if it is complete, and every Čech-complete space is a Baire space. In general, we have these proper implications: topologically complete → Čech-complete → Baire.
It is not the case that a complete uniform space (meaning complete with respect to its uniformity) is a Baire space. See MathOverflow here for some examples.
When Bill Lawvere interpreted (in Lawvere 1973) metric spaces as certain enriched categories, he found that a metric space was complete if and only if every adjunction of bimodules over the enriched category is induced by an enriched functor. Accordingly, this becomes the notion of Cauchy-complete category. (Note that one must say ‘Cauchy’ here, since this is weaker than being a complete category, which is based on an incompatible analogy.)
a complete normed vector space is a Banach space
A.V. Arkhangel′skii (1977). Complete space. Matematicheskaya entsiklopediya. Updated English version.
Bill Lawvere (1973). Metric spaces, generalized logic and closed categories. Reprinted in TAC, 1986. Web.
Last revised on August 13, 2023 at 18:07:28. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.