Fréchet–Urysohn space
In the field of topology, a Fréchet–Urysohn space is a topological space X with the property that for every subset , the closure of S in X is identical to the sequential closure of S in X. Fréchet–Urysohn spaces are a special type of sequential space.
The space is named after Maurice Fréchet and Pavel Urysohn.
Definitions
Let X be a topological space. For any subset S of X, the sequential closure of S is the set
- .
A space X is said to be a Fréchet–Urysohn space if for every subset subset S of X, , where denotes the closure of S in X.
If S is any subset of X then:
- a sequence is eventually in S if there exists an positive integer N such that for all ;
- S is sequentially open if each sequence (xn) in X converging to a point of S is eventually in S;
- Typically, if X is understood then is written in place of .
- S is sequentially closed if , or equivalently, if whenever (xn) is a sequence in S converging to x, then x must also be in S.
The complement of a sequentially open set is a sequentially closed set, and vice versa. Every open subset of X is sequentially open and every closed set is sequentially closed. The converses are not generally true. The spaces for which the converse is true are called sequential spaces; that is, a sequential space is a topological space in which every sequentially open subset is necessarily open (or equivalently, a space in which every sequentially closed subset is necessarily closed). Every Fréchet-Urysohn space is a sequential space but there are sequential spaces that are not Fréchet-Urysohn spaces.
Sequential (resp. Fréchet-Urysohn) spaces can be viewed as exactly those spaces X where for all subsets , knowledge of which sequences in S converge to which point(s) of X is sufficient to determine whether or not S is closed in X (resp. to determine S’s closure in X).
Let denote the set of all sequentially open subsets of the topological space . Then is a topology on X that contains the original topology (i.e. ).
Characterizations
Let be a topological space. Then the following are equivalent:
- X is a Fréchet–Urysohn space;
- for every subset subset S of X, ;
- every subspace of X is a sequential space.
Properties
Examples
- Every first-countable space is a Fréchet–Urysohn space.
Strong Fréchet–Urysohn space
A topological space is a strong Fréchet–Urysohn space if for every point and every sequence of subsets of the space such that , there are points such that .
The above properties can be expressed as selection principles.
See also
- Axioms of countability
- First-countable space
- Sequential space
References
- Engelking 1989, Example 1.6.18
- Ma, Dan. "A note about the Arens' space". Retrieved 1 August 2013.
- Arkhangel'skii, A.V. and Pontryagin, L.S., General Topology I, Springer-Verlag, New York (1990) ISBN 3-540-18178-4.
- Booth, P.I. and Tillotson, A., Monoidal closed, cartesian closed and convenient categories of topological spaces Pacific J. Math., 88 (1980) pp. 35–53.
- Engelking, R., General Topology, Heldermann, Berlin (1989). Revised and completed edition.
- Franklin, S. P., "Spaces in Which Sequences Suffice", Fund. Math. 57 (1965), 107-115.
- Franklin, S. P., "Spaces in Which Sequences Suffice II", Fund. Math. 61 (1967), 51-56.
- Goreham, Anthony, "Sequential Convergence in Topological Spaces"
- Steenrod, N.E., A convenient category of topological spaces, Michigan Math. J., 14 (1967), 133-152.