Compactly-generated Space
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In topology, a compactly generated space is a topological space whose topology is coherent with the family of all compact subspaces. Specifically, a topological space ''X'' is compactly generated if it satisfies the following condition: :A subspace ''A'' is
closed Closed may refer to: Mathematics * Closure (mathematics), a set, along with operations, for which applying those operations on members always results in a member of the set * Closed set, a set which contains all its limit points * Closed interval, ...
in ''X'' if and only if ''A'' ∩ ''K'' is closed in ''K'' for all compact subspaces ''K'' ⊆ ''X''. Equivalently, one can replace ''closed'' with '' open'' in this definition. If ''X'' is coherent with any cover of compact subspaces in the above sense then it is, in fact, coherent with all compact subspaces. A Hausdorff-compactly generated space or k-space is a topological space whose topology is coherent with the family of all compact Hausdorff subspaces. Sometimes in the literature a compactly generated space refers to a Hausdorff-compactly generated space. In these cases compactness is often explicitly redefined at the beginning to mean both compact and Hausdorff (and quasi-compact takes the meaning of compact). In this article we make a clear separation between compactly generated spaces and Hausdorff-compactly generated spaces, since the choice affects the statement of the associated theorems. A compactly generated Hausdorff space is a compactly generated space that is also Hausdorff. This is not to be confused with a Hausdorff-compactly generated space which may or may not be Hausdorff. Like many compactness conditions, compactly generated spaces are often assumed to be Hausdorff or weakly Hausdorff. See the category of compactly generated weak Hausdorff spaces for the use in algebraic topology.


Motivation

Hausdorff-compactly generated spaces were originally called k-spaces, after the German word ''kompakt''. They were studied by Hurewicz, and can be found in General Topology by Kelley, Topology by Dugundji, Rational Homotopy Theory by Félix, Halperin, and Thomas. The motivation for their deeper study came in the 1960s from well known deficiencies of the usual
category of topological spaces In mathematics, the category of topological spaces, often denoted Top, is the category whose objects are topological spaces and whose morphisms are continuous maps. This is a category because the composition of two continuous maps is again contin ...
. This fails to be a cartesian closed category, the usual
cartesian product In mathematics, specifically set theory, the Cartesian product of two sets ''A'' and ''B'', denoted ''A''×''B'', is the set of all ordered pairs where ''a'' is in ''A'' and ''b'' is in ''B''. In terms of set-builder notation, that is : A\ti ...
of identification maps is not always an identification map, and the usual product of CW-complexes need not be a CW-complex. ''(See the Appendix)'' By contrast, the category of simplicial sets had many convenient properties, including being cartesian closed. The history of the study of repairing this situation is given in the article on the ''n''Lab o
convenient categories of spaces
The first suggestion (1962) to remedy this situation was to restrict oneself to the full subcategory of Hausdorff-compactly generated Hausdorff spaces, which is in fact cartesian closed. These ideas extend on the de Vries duality theorem. A definition of the exponential object is given below. Another suggestion (1964) was to consider the usual Hausdorff spaces but use functions continuous on compact subsets. These ideas generalize to the non-Hausdorff case; ''(See section 5.9)'' i.e. with compactly generated spaces. This is useful since identification spaces of Hausdorff spaces need not be Hausdorff.P. I. Booth and J. Tillotson,
Monoidal closed, Cartesian closed and convenient categories of topological spaces
, ''Pacific Journal of Mathematics'', 88 (1980) pp.33-53.
In modern-day algebraic topology, this property is mostly commonly coupled with the weak Hausdorff property, so that one works in the category of weak-Hausdorff Hausdorff-compactly generated (WHCG) spaces.


Examples and counterexamples

Most topological spaces commonly studied in mathematics are (Hausdorff-)compactly generated. In the following the bracketed (Hausdorff) properties and (Hausdorff-) prefixes are meant to be applied together. Generally, if the space is Hausdorff-compactly generated, rather than just compactly generated, then its theorems often require an additional assumption of Hausdorffness somewhere. *Every Hausdorff-compactly generated space is compactly generated. *Every (Hausdorff) compact space is (Hausdorff-)compactly generated. *Every locally compact (Hausdorff) space is (Hausdorff-)compactly generated. *Every first-countable (Hausdorff) space is (Hausdorff-)compactly generated. * Topological manifolds are locally compact Hausdorff and therefore Hausdorff-compactly generated. * Metric spaces are first-countable Hausdorff and therefore Hausdorff-compactly generated Hausdorff. *Every CW complex is Hausdorff-compactly generated and Hausdorff. *Every sequential space is a quotient of a metric space and therefore Hausdorff-compactly generated. Examples of topological spaces that fail to be compactly generated include the following: * The space (\mathbb R \backslash \) \times (\mathbb R/\) , where the first factor uses the subspace topology, the second factor is the
quotient space Quotient space may refer to a quotient set when the sets under consideration are considered as spaces. In particular: *Quotient space (topology), in case of topological spaces * Quotient space (linear algebra), in case of vector spaces *Quotient ...
of R where all natural numbers are identified with a single point, and the product uses the product topology. * If \mathcal F is a non-principal ultrafilter on an infinite set X, the induced topology has the property that every compact set is finite, and X is not compactly generated.


Properties

*Every
locally closed In topology, a branch of mathematics, a subset E of a topological space X is said to be locally closed if any of the following equivalent conditions are satisfied: * E is the intersection of an open set and a closed set in X. * For each point x\in ...
subset of (Hausdorff)-compactly generated space is (Hausdorff)-compactly generated. A subset is locally closed if it is an intersection of an open subset and a closed subset. *A quotient of a (Hausdorff)-compactly generated space is (Hausdorff)-compactly generated. *A disjoint union of (Hausdorff)-compactly generated spaces is (Hausdorff)-compactly generated. *A wedge sum of (Hausdorff)-compactly generated spaces is (Hausdorff)-compactly generated. *The continuity of a map defined on a (Hausdorff-)compactly generated space ''X'' can be determined solely by looking at the compact (Hausdorff) subsets of ''X''. Specifically, a function ''f'' : ''X'' → ''Y'' is continuous if and only if it is continuous when restricted to each compact (Hausdorff) subset ''K'' ⊆ ''X''. *If X is (Hausdorff-)compactly generated and Y is locally compact (Hausdorff), then the product X \times Y is (Hausdorff-)compactly generated. *If ''X'' and Y are two (Hausdorff-)compactly generated spaces, then X \times Y may not be (Hausdorff-)compactly generated. Therefore, when working in categories of (Hausdorff-)compactly generated spaces it is necessary to define the product as (''X'' × ''Y'')c, the k-ification of the product topology (see below).


K-ification

Given any topological space ''X'' we can define a possibly finer topology on ''X'' that is compactly generated, sometimes called the k-ification of the topology. Let denote the family of compact subsets of ''X''. We define the new topology on ''X'' by declaring a subset ''A'' to be closed if and only if ''A'' ∩ ''K''α is closed in ''K''α for each α. Denote this new space by ''X''c. One can show that the compact subsets of ''X''c and ''X'' coincide, and the induced topologies on compact subsets are the same. It follows that ''X''c is compactly generated. If ''X'' was compactly generated to start with then ''X''c = ''X''. Otherwise the topology on ''X''c is strictly finer than ''X'' (i.e. there are more open sets). This construction is functorial. We denote CGTop the full subcategory of Top with objects the compactly generated spaces, and CGHaus the full subcategory of CGTop with objects the Hausdorff spaces. The functor from Top to CGTop that takes ''X'' to ''X''c is right adjoint to the
inclusion functor In mathematics, specifically category theory, a subcategory of a category ''C'' is a category ''S'' whose objects are objects in ''C'' and whose morphisms are morphisms in ''C'' with the same identities and composition of morphisms. Intuitivel ...
CGTop → Top. The above discussion applies also to the Hausdorff-compactly generated spaces after replacing compact with compact Hausdorff, but with the following difference. To prove that the compact Hausdorff subsets of the k-ification are the same as in the original topology (and hence that the k-ification is Hausdorff-compactly generated) requires that the original topology is also k-Hausdorff. The following properties are equivalent: * Hausdorff-compactly generated k-Hausdorff * Hausdorff-compactly generated weak Hausdorff * Compactly generated k-Hausdorff The exponential object in CGHaus is given by (''Y''''X'')c where ''Y''''X'' is the space of continuous maps from ''X'' to ''Y'' with the compact-open topology. These ideas can be generalised to the non-Hausdorff case. This is useful since identification spaces of Hausdorff spaces need not be Hausdorff.


See also

* Compact-open topology * Countably generated space * CW complex * Finitely generated space *
K-space (functional analysis) In mathematics, more specifically in functional analysis, a K-space is an F-space In functional analysis, an F-space is a vector space X over the real or complex numbers together with a metric d : X \times X \to \R such that # Scalar multiplica ...
* Weak Hausdorff space


References


Overview


Compactly generated spaces
- contains an excellent catalog of properties and constructions with compactly generated spaces * *


Other

* * * *
J. Peter May Jon Peter May (born September 16, 1939 in New York) is an American mathematician working in the fields of algebraic topology, category theory, homotopy theory, and the foundational aspects of spectra. He is known, in particular, for the May ...
,
A Concise Course in Algebraic Topology
', (1999) Chicago Lectures in Mathematics ''(See Chapter 5.)'' *{{cite web , last = Strickland , first = Neil P. , author-link = Neil Strickland , title = The category of CGWH spaces , year = 2009 , url = http://neil-strickland.staff.shef.ac.uk/courses/homotopy/cgwh.pdf General topology Homotopy theory