Tychonoff space explained
In topology and related branches of mathematics, Tychonoff spaces and completely regular spaces are kinds of topological spaces. These conditions are examples of separation axioms. A Tychonoff space is any completely regular space that is also a Hausdorff space; there exist completely regular spaces that are not Tychonoff (i.e. not Hausdorff).
Paul Urysohn had used the notion of completely regular space in a 1925 paper[1] without giving it a name. But it was Andrey Tychonoff who introduced the terminology completely regular in 1930.[2]
Definitions
A topological space
is called
if points can be
separated from closed sets via (bounded) continuous real-valued functions. In technical terms this means: for any
closed set
and any
point
there exists a
real-valued continuous function
such that
and
(Equivalently one can choose any two values instead of
and
and even require that
be a bounded function.)
A topological space is called a (alternatively: , or, or) if it is a completely regular Hausdorff space.
Remark. Completely regular spaces and Tychonoff spaces are related through the notion of Kolmogorov equivalence. A topological space is Tychonoff if and only if it's both completely regular and T0. On the other hand, a space is completely regular if and only if its Kolmogorov quotient is Tychonoff.
Naming conventions
Across mathematical literature different conventions are applied when it comes to the term "completely regular" and the "T"-Axioms. The definitions in this section are in typical modern usage. Some authors, however, switch the meanings of the two kinds of terms, or use all terms interchangeably. In Wikipedia, the terms "completely regular" and "Tychonoff" are used freely and the "T"-notation is generally avoided. In standard literature, caution is thus advised, to find out which definitions the author is using. For more on this issue, see History of the separation axioms.
Examples
Almost every topological space studied in mathematical analysis is Tychonoff, or at least completely regular.For example, the real line is Tychonoff under the standard Euclidean topology.Other examples include:
- Every metric space is Tychonoff; every pseudometric space is completely regular.
- Every locally compact regular space is completely regular, and therefore every locally compact Hausdorff space is Tychonoff.
- In particular, every topological manifold is Tychonoff.
- Every totally ordered set with the order topology is Tychonoff.
- Every topological group is completely regular.
- Every pseudometrizable space is completely regular, but not Tychonoff if the space is not Hausdorff.
- Every seminormed space is completely regular (both because it is pseudometrizable and because it is a topological vector space, hence a topological group). But it will not be Tychonoff if the seminorm is not a norm.
- Generalizing both the metric spaces and the topological groups, every uniform space is completely regular. The converse is also true: every completely regular space is uniformisable.
- Every CW complex is Tychonoff.
- Every normal regular space is completely regular, and every normal Hausdorff space is Tychonoff.
- The Niemytzki plane is an example of a Tychonoff space that is not normal.
There are regular Hausdorff spaces that are not completely regular, but such examples are complicated to construct. One of them is the so-called Tychonoff corkscrew, which contains two points such that any continuous real-valued function on the space has the same value at these two points. An even more complicated construction starts with the Tychonoff corkscrew and builds a regular Hausdorff space called Hewitt's condensed corkscrew,[3] which is not completely regular in a stronger way, namely, every continuous real-valued function on the space is constant.
Properties
Preservation
Complete regularity and the Tychonoff property are well-behaved with respect to initial topologies. Specifically, complete regularity is preserved by taking arbitrary initial topologies and the Tychonoff property is preserved by taking point-separating initial topologies. It follows that:
- Every subspace of a completely regular or Tychonoff space has the same property.
- A nonempty product space is completely regular (respectively Tychonoff) if and only if each factor space is completely regular (respectively Tychonoff).
Like all separation axioms, complete regularity is not preserved by taking final topologies. In particular, quotients of completely regular spaces need not be regular. Quotients of Tychonoff spaces need not even be Hausdorff, with one elementary counterexample being the line with two origins. There are closed quotients of the Moore plane that provide counterexamples.
Real-valued continuous functions
For any topological space
let
denote the family of real-valued continuous functions on
and let
be the subset of
bounded real-valued continuous functions.
Completely regular spaces can be characterized by the fact that their topology is completely determined by
or
In particular:
is completely regular if and only if it has the
initial topology induced by
or
is completely regular if and only if every closed set can be written as the intersection of a family of
zero sets in
(i.e. the zero sets form a basis for the closed sets of
).
is completely regular if and only if the
cozero sets of
form a
basis for the topology of
Given an arbitrary topological space
there is a universal way of associating a completely regular space with
Let ρ be the initial topology on
induced by
or, equivalently, the topology generated by the basis of cozero sets in
Then ρ will be the
finest completely regular topology on
that is coarser than
This construction is
universal in the sense that any continuous function
to a completely regular space
will be continuous on
In the language of
category theory, the
functor that sends
to
is
left adjoint to the inclusion functor
CReg →
Top. Thus the category of completely regular spaces
CReg is a
reflective subcategory of
Top, the
category of topological spaces. By taking Kolmogorov quotients, one sees that the subcategory of Tychonoff spaces is also reflective.
One can show that
in the above construction so that the rings
and
are typically only studied for completely regular spaces
The category of realcompact Tychonoff spaces is anti-equivalent to the category of the rings
(where
is realcompact) together with ring homomorphisms as maps. For example one can reconstruct
from
when
is (real) compact. The algebraic theory of these rings is therefore subject of intensive studies.A vast generalization of this class of rings that still resembles many properties of Tychonoff spaces, but is also applicable in
real algebraic geometry, is the class of
real closed rings.
Embeddings
Tychonoff spaces are precisely those spaces that can be embedded in compact Hausdorff spaces. More precisely, for every Tychonoff space
there exists a compact Hausdorff space
such that
is
homeomorphic to a subspace of
In fact, one can always choose
to be a
Tychonoff cube (i.e. a possibly infinite product of
unit intervals). Every Tychonoff cube is compact Hausdorff as a consequence of
Tychonoff's theorem. Since every subspace of a compact Hausdorff space is Tychonoff one has:
A topological space is Tychonoff if and only if it can be embedded in a Tychonoff cube.
Compactifications
Of particular interest are those embeddings where the image of
is
dense in
these are called Hausdorff
compactifications of
Given any embedding of a Tychonoff space
in a compact Hausdorff space
the
closure of the image of
in
is a compactification of
In the same 1930 article
[2] where Tychonoff defined completely regular spaces, he also proved that every Tychonoff space has a Hausdorff compactification.
It is characterized by the
universal property that, given a continuous map
from
to any other compact Hausdorff space
there is a
unique continuous map
that extends
in the sense that
is the
composition of
and
Uniform structures
Complete regularity is exactly the condition necessary for the existence of uniform structures on a topological space. In other words, every uniform space has a completely regular topology and every completely regular space
is
uniformizable. A topological space admits a separated uniform structure if and only if it is Tychonoff.
Given a completely regular space
there is usually more than one uniformity on
that is compatible with the topology of
However, there will always be a finest compatible uniformity, called the fine uniformity on
If
is Tychonoff, then the uniform structure can be chosen so that
becomes the
completion of the uniform space
Bibliography
- Book: Rings of continuous functions . Dover reprint . Gillman . Leonard . Jerison . Meyer . Leonard Gillman . 1960 . Springer-Verlag . NY . Graduate Texts in Mathematics, No. 43 . xiii . 978-048681688-3.
- Book: Steen . Lynn Arthur . Lynn Arthur Steen . Seebach . J. Arthur Jr. . J. Arthur Seebach, Jr. . . 1978 . . Berlin, New York . Dover reprint of 1978 . 978-0-486-68735-3 . 507446 . 1995 .
- Book: Willard, Stephen . General Topology . Dover reprint . 1970 . Addison-Wesley Publishing Company . Reading, Massachusetts . 0-486-43479-6.
Notes and References
- Urysohn . Paul . Über die Mächtigkeit der zusammenhängenden Mengen . Mathematische Annalen . 1925 . 94 . 1 . 262–295 . 10.1007/BF01208659. See pages 291 and 292.
- Tychonoff . A. . Über die topologische Erweiterung von Räumen . Mathematische Annalen . 1930 . 102 . 1 . 544–561 . 10.1007/BF01782364.
- Hewitt . Edwin . On Two Problems of Urysohn . Annals of Mathematics . 1946 . 47 . 3 . 503-509 . 10.2307/1969089.