Topological space
From Maths
Revision as of 19:07, 12 February 2015 by Alec (Talk | contribs) (Created page with "A topological space is a set <math>X</math> coupled with a topology on <math>X</math> denoted <math>\mathcal{J}\subset\mathcal{P}(X)</math>, which is a collection of subsets o...")
A topological space is a set X coupled with a topology on X denoted J⊂P(X), which is a collection of subsets of X with the following properties:
- Both ∅,X∈J
- For the collection {Uα}α∈I⊂J where I is any indexing set, ∪α∈IUα∈J - that is it is closed under union (infinite, finite, whatever)
- For the collection {Ui}ni=1⊂J (any finite collection of members of the topology) that ∩ni=1Ui∈J
We write the topological space as (X,J) or just X if the topology on X is obvious.
The elements of J are defined to be "open" sets.