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7 votes
0 answers
349 views

An open set which is not the union of a closed set and a countable set

The following fact is probably a known result: Fact. Let $X$ be an uncountable Polish space. Then there exists an open subset of $X$ which is not the union of a closed set and a countable set. Proof:...
Paolo Leonetti's user avatar
7 votes
0 answers
266 views

Remote points in $\beta X$

It is known that in general convergence by sequences is not enough to account for all points in $\beta X \setminus X$, where $\beta X$ refers to the Stone-Cech compactification of a topological space $...
noname's user avatar
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6 votes
0 answers
255 views

Every Polish space is the image of the Baire space by a continuous and closed map, reference

The following result was originally proven by Engelking in his 1969 paper On closed images of the space of irrationals (AMS, JSTOR, MR239571, Zbl 0177.25501) Every Polish space (i.e. every separable ...
Lorenzo's user avatar
  • 2,286
4 votes
0 answers
142 views

Consistency of a strange (choice-wise) set of reals, pt. 2

This is a follow-up on this question. Consider a set $X\subseteq \mathbb{R}$ such that $X$ is not separable wrt its subspace topology Every countable family of non-empty pairwise disjoint subsets of $...
Lorenzo's user avatar
  • 2,286
4 votes
0 answers
105 views

Borel selections of usco maps on metrizable compacta

The problem posed below is motivated by this problem of Chris Heunen and in fact is its reformulation in the language of usco maps. Let us recal that an usco map is an upper semicontinuous compact-...
Taras Banakh's user avatar
  • 41.9k
3 votes
0 answers
251 views

What is the origin of the metrization problem for compact convex sets?

The following is an ``old question in analysis:'' Is it true that every perfectly normal compact convex subset of a locally convex topological vector space is metrizable? Here perfectly normal means ...
Justin Moore's user avatar
  • 3,547
2 votes
0 answers
120 views

Two small uncountable cardinals related to Q-sets

A subset $A$ of the real line is called a Q-set if any subset of of $A$ is of type $F_\sigma$ in $A$. Let $\mathfrak q_0$ be the smallest cardinality of a subset $X\subset\mathbb R$ which is not a Q-...
Taras Banakh's user avatar
  • 41.9k
2 votes
0 answers
371 views

Descriptive set theory on $\mathbb{R}^\mathbb{N}$

The short version of my question is, What is a good source for learning about descriptive set theory on the space $\mathbb{R}^\mathbb{N}$, under the product topology coming from the discrete topology ...
Noah Schweber's user avatar