Topological Space: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
imported>Aleksander Stos m (→Examples: blue) |
imported>Aleksander Stos (short time editor-aimed message before deletion -- please do not develop this article but help moving useful content to the right place.) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
;It was suggested that this article is merged with [[Topological space]], the latter being the right title according to our naming conventions. | |||
Topological spaces are | Topological spaces are | ||
Revision as of 03:06, 5 December 2007
- It was suggested that this article is merged with Topological space, the latter being the right title according to our naming conventions.
Topological spaces are
The Open and Closed Set Axioms
Let be a set, and a collection of subsets of (which will be called the open subsets of with respect to the topology ) verifying the following axioms:
- Any finite intersection of sets in is again in ; i.e., if , then .
- Any union of a family of sets is in ; i.e., .
When these axioms are satisfied, we say that is a topological space of open sets .
The Neighborhood Axioms
One can phrase a set of axioms for the definition of a topological space by defining the neighborhoods of points in that space. This is particularly useful when one considers topologies on topological abelian groups and topological rings by subgroups or ideals, respectively, because knowing the neighborhoods of any point is equivalent to knowing the neighborhoods of .