Difference between revisions of "Hausdorff space"

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==Further work for this page==
 
==Further work for this page==
 
* Link to a theorem about all metric spaces being Hausdorff.  
 
* Link to a theorem about all metric spaces being Hausdorff.  
 
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* [[A subspace of a Hausdorff space is Hausdorff]]
 
==References==
 
==References==
 
<references/>
 
<references/>
 
{{Topology navbox|plain}}
 
{{Topology navbox|plain}}
 
{{Definition|Topology}}
 
{{Definition|Topology}}

Revision as of 12:34, 10 October 2016

Grade: A
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Page was 1 year and 1 day since modification, basically a stub, seriously needs an update.

Definition

Given a Topological space [ilmath](X,\mathcal{J})[/ilmath] we say it is Hausdorff[1] or satisfies the Hausdorff axiom if:

  • For all [ilmath]a,b\in X[/ilmath] that are distinct there exists neighbourhoods to [ilmath]a[/ilmath] and [ilmath]b[/ilmath], [ilmath]N_a[/ilmath] and [ilmath]N_b[/ilmath] such that:
    • [ilmath]N_a\cap N_b=\emptyset[/ilmath]

Alternate definition

  • [ilmath]\forall a,b\in X\exists A,B\in\mathcal{J}[a\ne b\implies A\cap B=\emptyset][/ilmath][2]
(Unknown grade)
This page requires one or more proofs to be filled in, it is on a to-do list for being expanded with them.
Please note that this does not mean the content is unreliable. Unless there are any caveats mentioned below the statement comes from a reliable source. As always, Warnings and limitations will be clearly shown and possibly highlighted if very important (see template:Caution et al).
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Are these statements the same? Clearly [ilmath]\text{neighbourhood }\implies\text{open-set} [/ilmath] as a neighbourhood to a point requires the existence of an open set containing that point (contained in the neighbourhood) and clearly [ilmath]\text{open-set}\implies\text{neighbourhood} [/ilmath] as an open set is a neighbourhood - write this up.

Further work for this page

References

  1. Introduction to Topology - Bert Mendelson
  2. Introduction to Topological Manifolds - John M. Lee