Locally Hausdorff space

Last updated
Separation axioms
in topological spaces
Kolmogorov classification
T0  (Kolmogorov)
T1  (Fréchet)
T2  (Hausdorff)
T2½ (Urysohn)
completely T2  (completely Hausdorff)
T3  (regular Hausdorff)
T3½ (Tychonoff)
T4  (normal Hausdorff)
T5  (completely normal
 Hausdorff)
T6  (perfectly normal
 Hausdorff)

In mathematics, in the field of topology, a topological space is said to be locally Hausdorff if every point has a neighbourhood that is a Hausdorff space under the subspace topology. [1]

Contents

Examples and sufficient conditions

Properties

A space is locally Hausdorff exactly if it can be written as a union of Hausdorff open subspaces. [2] And in a locally Hausdorff space each point belongs to some Hausdorff dense open subspace. [3]

Every locally Hausdorff space is T1. [4] The converse is not true in general. For example, an infinite set with the cofinite topology is a T1 space that is not locally Hausdorff.

Every locally Hausdorff space is sober. [5]

If is a topological group that is locally Hausdorff at some point then is Hausdorff. This follows from the fact that if there exists a homeomorphism from to itself carrying to so is locally Hausdorff at every point, and is therefore T1 (and T1 topological groups are Hausdorff).

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References

  1. Niefield, Susan B. (1991), "Weak products over a locally Hausdorff locale", Category theory (Como, 1990), Lecture Notes in Math., vol. 1488, Springer, Berlin, pp. 298–305, doi:10.1007/BFb0084228, MR   1173020 .
  2. Niefield, S. B. (1983). "A note on the locally Hausdorff property". Cahiers de topologie et géométrie différentielle. 24 (1): 87–95. ISSN   2681-2398., Lemma 3.2
  3. Baillif, Mathieu; Gabard, Alexandre (2008). "Manifolds: Hausdorffness versus homogeneity". Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society. 136 (3): 1105–1111. doi: 10.1090/S0002-9939-07-09100-9 ., Lemma 4.2
  4. Niefield 1983, Proposition 3.4.
  5. Niefield 1983, Proposition 3.5.