Monotonically normal space

From testwiki
Revision as of 10:48, 10 February 2023 by imported>Citation bot (Alter: journal, pages. Add: issue. Formatted dashes. | Use this bot. Report bugs. | Suggested by Corvus florensis | #UCB_webform 2022/3500)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Short description

In mathematics, specifically in the field of topology, a monotonically normal space is a particular kind of normal space, defined in terms of a monotone normality operator. It satisfies some interesting properties; for example metric spaces and linearly ordered spaces are monotonically normal, and every monotonically normal space is hereditarily normal.

Definition

A topological space X is called monotonically normal if it satisfies any of the following equivalent definitions:[1][2][3][4]

Definition 1

The space X is T1 and there is a function G that assigns to each ordered pair (A,B) of disjoint closed sets in X an open set G(A,B) such that:

(i) AG(A,B)G(A,B)XB;
(ii) G(A,B)G(A,B) whenever AA and BB.

Condition (i) says X is a normal space, as witnessed by the function G. Condition (ii) says that G(A,B) varies in a monotone fashion, hence the terminology monotonically normal. The operator G is called a monotone normality operator.

One can always choose G to satisfy the property

G(A,B)G(B,A)=,

by replacing each G(A,B) by G(A,B)G(B,A).

Definition 2

The space X is T1 and there is a function G that assigns to each ordered pair (A,B) of separated sets in X (that is, such that AB=BA=) an open set G(A,B) satisfying the same conditions (i) and (ii) of Definition 1.

Definition 3

The space X is T1 and there is a function μ that assigns to each pair (x,U) with U open in X and xU an open set μ(x,U) such that:

(i) xμ(x,U);
(ii) if μ(x,U)μ(y,V), then xV or yU.

Such a function μ automatically satisfies

xμ(x,U)μ(x,U)U.

(Reason: Suppose yXU. Since X is T1, there is an open neighborhood V of y such that xV. By condition (ii), μ(x,U)μ(y,V)=, that is, μ(y,V) is a neighborhood of y disjoint from μ(x,U). So yμ(x,U).)[5]

Definition 4

Let be a base for the topology of X. The space X is T1 and there is a function μ that assigns to each pair (x,U) with U and xU an open set μ(x,U) satisfying the same conditions (i) and (ii) of Definition 3.

Definition 5

The space X is T1 and there is a function μ that assigns to each pair (x,U) with U open in X and xU an open set μ(x,U) such that:

(i) xμ(x,U);
(ii) if U and V are open and xUV, then μ(x,U)μ(x,V);
(iii) if x and y are distinct points, then μ(x,X{y})μ(y,X{x})=.

Such a function μ automatically satisfies all conditions of Definition 3.

Examples

Properties

References

Template:Reflist

  1. Template:Cite journal
  2. Template:Cite journal
  3. 3.0 3.1 Template:Cite journal
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 Template:Cite web
  5. Template:Cite journal
  6. Heath, Lutzer, Zenor, Theorem 5.3
  7. Template:Cite journal
  8. Heath, Lutzer, Zenor, Theorem 3.1
  9. Heath, Lutzer, Zenor, Theorem 2.6
  10. Template:Cite journal