Weak Hausdorff space explained
In mathematics, a weak Hausdorff space or weakly Hausdorff space is a topological space where the image of every continuous map from a compact Hausdorff space into the space is closed.[1] In particular, every Hausdorff space is weak Hausdorff. As a separation property, it is stronger than T1, which is equivalent to the statement that points are closed. Specifically, every weak Hausdorff space is a T1 space.[2] [3]
The notion was introduced by M. C. McCord[4] to remedy an inconvenience of working with the category of Hausdorff spaces. It is often used in tandem with compactly generated spaces in algebraic topology. For that, see the category of compactly generated weak Hausdorff spaces.
k-Hausdorff spaces
A [5] is a topological space which satisfies any of the following equivalent conditions:
- Each compact subspace is Hausdorff.
- The diagonal
is k-closed in
-
is
, if
is closed in
for each compact
- Each compact subspace is closed and strongly locally compact.
and each (not necessarily open)
neighborhood
of
there exists a compact neighborhood
of
such that
Properties
- A k-Hausdorff space is weak Hausdorff. For if
is k-Hausdorff and
is a continuous map from a compact space
then
is compact, hence Hausdorff, hence closed.
- A Hausdorff space is k-Hausdorff. For a space is Hausdorff if and only if the diagonal
is closed in
and each closed subset is a k-closed set.
- A k-Hausdorff space is KC. A is a topological space in which every compact subspace is closed.
- To show that the coherent topology induced by compact Hausdorff subspaces preserves the compact Hausdorff subspaces and their subspace topology requires that the space be k-Hausdorff; weak Hausdorff is not enough. Hence k-Hausdorff can be seen as the more fundamental definition.
Δ-Hausdorff spaces
A is a topological space where the image of every path is closed; that is, if whenever
is continuous then
is closed in
Every weak Hausdorff space is
-Hausdorff, and every
-Hausdorff space is a
T1 space. A space is
if its topology is the
finest topology such that each map
from a topological
-simplex
to
is continuous.
-Hausdorff spaces are to
-generated spaces as weak Hausdorff spaces are to compactly generated spaces.
See also
- , a Hausdorff space where every continuous function from the space into itself has a fixed point.
Notes and References
- .
- J.P. May, A Concise Course in Algebraic Topology. (1999) University of Chicago Press (See chapter 5)
- Web site: Strickland. Neil P.. The category of CGWH spaces. 2009. PDF.
- .
- Lawson. J. Madison. B. 1974. Quotients of k-semigroups. Semigroup Forum. 9. 1–18. 10.1007/BF02194829.