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Continuum theory, point-set topology, spaces with algebraic structure, foundations, dimension theory, local and global properties.
7
votes
Accepted
Is ω1 × βN normal?
I have reread the proof and it's completely correct.
The idea is that $\omega_1 \times \beta\mathbb{N}$ maps perfectly onto
a non-normal space, and normality is preserved under perfect maps.
Tamano's …
3
votes
$2^{\omega_1}$ separable?
This is indeed the Hewitt-Marczewski-Pondiczery theorem. My proof, following Engelking, is here. It's in fact not that hard, the fact for a product of copies of 2 point discrete spaces already implies …
6
votes
Accepted
Lebesgue dimension of images
Some results from Engelking's dimension theory book:
If $f: X \mapsto Y$ is a closed, continuous and surjective function between normal spaces $X$ and $Y$, and $\forall y \in Y: | f^{-1}[{y}] | \le k …
8
votes
Accepted
Must a linearly ordered, separable space be metrizable?
You already found a (classical) counterexample: the double arrow ($[0,1] \times \{0,1\}$, ordered lexicographically), which is even compact and separable. There is however a nice metrization theorem f …
4
votes
Topological spaces, uncountable subsets and separability
The property "Every uncountable set has a limit point" is related to the Lindelöf property (every open cover has a countable subcover). For metrisable spaces these notions are equivalent, and in gener …
2
votes
Accepted
Topology generated by the collection of open sets
So we start with $(X, \mathcal{T})$, a $T_1$ space in which every point is a $G_{\delta}$, as witnessed by open sets $U_n(x)$, $n \in \mathbb{N}$, $x \in X$. W.l.o.g. we can take these sets to be decr …
2
votes
Accepted
On generalized ordered spaces
Lemma: if $K$ and $L$ are (order) convex in a linearly ordered set $X$, and $x$ is in $K \cap L$, then $K \cup L$ is convex as well.
Proof: suppose $a < b$ are in $K \cup L$ and $c$ lies in $(a,b)$. …
1
vote
Accepted
some questions on Lindelöf property
A space is Lindelöf iff it satisfies condition A and is metaLindelöf (every open cover has a point-countable refinement), so one could say the difference is metaLindelöfness.
9
votes
Accepted
Are countable unions of metrizable spaces metrizable too?
No to all your questions. There are lots of countable non-metrizable spaces: an easy one is $\mathbb{N}$ in the cofinite topology, which can be written as a countable (disjoint) union of singletons (w …
7
votes
Accepted
Homeomorphic open sets and homogeneity
For an infinite Hausdorff space the diversity of a space is the number of homeomorphism types of non-empty open sets, so if all non-empty open sets are homeomorphic, the space is said to be of diversi …
3
votes
Accepted
Is there a metaLindelof nonLindelof space which has a dense hereditarily Lindelof subspace?
Suppose $X$ is metaLindelöf, and $A \subseteq X$ is hereditarily Lindelöf and dense.
Let $\mathcal{U}$ be an open cover of $X$ and let $\mathcal{V}$ be a point-countable refinement of $\mathcal{U}$. …
5
votes
Example of connected Hausdorff space $X$ and surjective continous map $f:X\to X\times X$
The Hilbert cube $[0,1]^\omega$. Just split the coordinates in two disjoint infinite sets. Most standard sequence spaces like $\ell^\infty, \ell^2$ will similarly work.
3
votes
Is a connected separable locally euclidean Hausdorff topological space second countable?
Indeed, check the paper by Gauld. Your (4) implies his condition hemicompact.
His example at p15, that you saw refutes the just separable condition (7). Note that (1)-(6) imply imply metrisability for …
4
votes
Hurewicz theorem on mappings that lower dimension
In Engelking's Theory of Dimensions, Finite and Infinite, Thm 3.3.10 (p. 200) proves the more general result
If $f: X \to Y$ is a closed mapping from a normal space $X$ to a weakly paracompact normal …
4
votes
Accepted
Question about closed projection
Let $(y_n)$ be a sequence in $Y$. Let $A$ be the subset of $Y \times \mathbf{R}$ of all points $(y_n, \frac{1}{n})$ for $n \in \mathbf{N}$, and let $B$ be its closure.
Then $\pi_2[B]$ is closed in $\m …