Core-compact space: Difference between revisions

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In general topology and related branches of mathematics, a core-compact topological space X is a topological space whose partially ordered set of open subsets is a continuous poset.[1] Equivalently, X is core-compact if it is exponentiable in the category Top of topological spaces.[1][2][3] Expanding the definition of an exponential object, this means that for any Y, the set of continuous functions 𝒞(X,Y) has a topology such that function application is a unique continuous function from X×𝒞(X,Y) to Y, which is given by the Compact-open topology and is the most general way to define it.[4]

Another equivalent concrete definition is that every neighborhood U of a point x contains a neighborhood V of x whose closure in U is compact.[1] As a result, every (weakly) locally compact space is core-compact, and every Hausdorff (or more generally, sober[4]) core-compact space is locally compact, so the definition is a slight weakening of the definition of a locally compact space in the non-Hausdorff case.

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