Arens–Fort space

Example neighborhood of (0,0) in the Arens–Fort space

In mathematics, the Arens–Fort space is a special example in the theory of topological spaces, named for Richard Friederich Arens and M. K. Fort, Jr.

Definition

The Arens–Fort space is the topological space ( X , τ ) {\displaystyle (X,\tau )} where X {\displaystyle X} is the set of ordered pairs of non-negative integers ( m , n ) . {\displaystyle (m,n).} A subset U X {\displaystyle U\subseteq X} is open, that is, belongs to τ , {\displaystyle \tau ,} if and only if:

  • U {\displaystyle U} does not contain ( 0 , 0 ) , {\displaystyle (0,0),} or
  • U {\displaystyle U} contains ( 0 , 0 ) {\displaystyle (0,0)} and also all but a finite number of points of all but a finite number of columns, where a column is a set { ( m , n )   :   0 n Z } {\displaystyle \{(m,n)~:~0\leq n\in \mathbb {Z} \}} with 0 m Z {\displaystyle 0\leq m\in \mathbb {Z} } fixed.

In other words, an open set is only "allowed" to contain ( 0 , 0 ) {\displaystyle (0,0)} if only a finite number of its columns contain significant gaps, where a gap in a column is significant if it omits an infinite number of points.

Properties

It is

  • Hausdorff
  • regular
  • normal

It is not:

There is no sequence in X { ( 0 , 0 ) } {\displaystyle X\setminus \{(0,0)\}} that converges to ( 0 , 0 ) . {\displaystyle (0,0).} However, there is a sequence x = ( x i ) i = 1 {\displaystyle x_{\bullet }=\left(x_{i}\right)_{i=1}^{\infty }} in X { ( 0 , 0 ) } {\displaystyle X\setminus \{(0,0)\}} such that ( 0 , 0 ) {\displaystyle (0,0)} is a cluster point of x . {\displaystyle x_{\bullet }.}

See also

  • Fort space – Examples of topological spaces
  • List of topologies – List of concrete topologies and topological spaces

References