Core-compact space
In general topology and related branches of mathematics, a core-compact topological space is a topological space whose partially ordered set of open subsets is a continuous poset.[1] Equivalently, is core-compact if it is exponentiable in the category Top of topological spaces.[1][2][3] This means that the functor has a right adjoint. Equivalently, for each topological space , there exists a topology on the set of continuous functions such that function application is continuous, and each continuous map may be curried to a continuous map . Note that this is the Compact-open topology if (and only if)[4] is locally compact. (In this article locally compact means that every point has a neighborhood base of compact neighborhoods; this is definition (3) in the linked article.)
Another equivalent concrete definition is that every neighborhood of a point contains a neighborhood of whose closure in is compact.[1] As a result, every locally compact space is core-compact. For Hausdorff spaces (or more generally, sober spaces[5]), core-compact space is equivalent to locally compact. In this sense the definition is a slight weakening of the definition of a locally compact space in the non-Hausdorff case.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c "Core-compact space". Encyclopedia of mathematics.
- ^ Gierz, Gerhard; Hofmann, Karl; Keimel, Klaus; Lawson, Jimmie; Mislove, Michael; Scott, Dana S. (2003). Continuous lattices and domains. Encyclopedia of Mathematics and Its Applications. Vol. 93. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511542725. ISBN 978-0-521-80338-0. MR 1975381. S2CID 118338851. Zbl 1088.06001.
- ^ Exponential law for spaces. at the nLab
- ^ Tim Campion. "Exponential law w.r.t. compact-open topology".
- ^ Vladimir Sotirov. "The compact-open topology: what is it really?" (PDF).
Further reading
[edit]- "core-compact but not locally compact". Stack Exchange. June 20, 2016.