Spectral space explained

In mathematics, a spectral space is a topological space that is homeomorphic to the spectrum of a commutative ring. It is sometimes also called a coherent space because of the connection to coherent topoi.

Definition

Let X be a topological space and let K

\circ

(X) be the set of all compact open subsets of X. Then X is said to be spectral if it satisfies all of the following conditions:

\circ

(X) is a basis of open subsets of X.

\circ

(X) is closed under finite intersections.

Equivalent descriptions

Let X be a topological space. Each of the following properties are equivalent to the property of X being spectral:

  1. X is homeomorphic to a projective limit of finite T0-spaces.
  2. X is homeomorphic to the spectrum of a bounded distributive lattice L. In this case, L is isomorphic (as a bounded lattice) to the lattice K

\circ

(X) (this is called Stone representation of distributive lattices).
  1. X is homeomorphic to the spectrum of a commutative ring.
  2. X is the topological space determined by a Priestley space.
  3. X is a T0 space whose frame of open sets is coherent (and every coherent frame comes from a unique spectral space in this way).

Properties

Let X be a spectral space and let K

\circ

(X) be as before. Then:

\circ

(X) is a bounded sublattice of subsets of X.

\circ

(X)) is again spectral.

\circ

(X) is a boolean algebra.

Spectral maps

A spectral map f: X → Y between spectral spaces X and Y is a continuous map such that the preimage of every open and compact subset of Y under f is again compact.

The category of spectral spaces, which has spectral maps as morphisms, is dually equivalent to the category of bounded distributive lattices (together with homomorphisms of such lattices). In this anti-equivalence, a spectral space X corresponds to the lattice K

\circ

(X).

References

Notes and References

  1. [Alexander Arhangelskii|A.V. Arkhangel'skii]
  2. G. Bezhanishvili, N. Bezhanishvili, D. Gabelaia, A. Kurz, (2010). "Bitopological duality for distributive lattices and Heyting algebras." Mathematical Structures in Computer Science, 20.