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mathematics Mathematics is a field of study that discovers and organizes methods, Mathematical theory, theories and theorems that are developed and Mathematical proof, proved for the needs of empirical sciences and mathematics itself. There are many ar ...
, a Lindelöf space is a
topological space In mathematics, a topological space is, roughly speaking, a Geometry, geometrical space in which Closeness (mathematics), closeness is defined but cannot necessarily be measured by a numeric Distance (mathematics), distance. More specifically, a to ...
in which every
open cover In mathematics, and more particularly in set theory, a cover (or covering) of a set X is a family of subsets of X whose union is all of X. More formally, if C = \lbrace U_\alpha : \alpha \in A \rbrace is an indexed family of subsets U_\alpha\su ...
has a
countable In mathematics, a Set (mathematics), set is countable if either it is finite set, finite or it can be made in one to one correspondence with the set of natural numbers. Equivalently, a set is ''countable'' if there exists an injective function fro ...
subcover. The Lindelöf property is a weakening of the more commonly used notion of ''
compactness In mathematics, specifically general topology, compactness is a property that seeks to generalize the notion of a closed and bounded subset of Euclidean space. The idea is that a compact space has no "punctures" or "missing endpoints", i.e., it ...
'', which requires the existence of a ''finite'' subcover. A is a topological space such that every subspace of it is Lindelöf. Such a space is sometimes called strongly Lindelöf, but confusingly that terminology is sometimes used with an altogether different meaning. The term ''hereditarily Lindelöf'' is more common and unambiguous. Lindelöf spaces are named after the Finnish
mathematician A mathematician is someone who uses an extensive knowledge of mathematics in their work, typically to solve mathematical problems. Mathematicians are concerned with numbers, data, quantity, mathematical structure, structure, space, Mathematica ...
Ernst Leonard Lindelöf.


Properties of Lindelöf spaces

* Every
compact space In mathematics, specifically general topology, compactness is a property that seeks to generalize the notion of a closed and bounded subset of Euclidean space. The idea is that a compact space has no "punctures" or "missing endpoints", i.e., i ...
, and more generally every
σ-compact space In mathematics, a topological space is said to be ''σ''-compact if it is the union of countably many compact subspaces. A space is said to be ''σ''-locally compact if it is both ''σ''-compact and (weakly) locally compact. That terminology ...
, is Lindelöf. In particular, every countable space is Lindelöf. * A Lindelöf space is compact if and only if it is countably compact. * Every second-countable space is Lindelöf, but not conversely. For example, there are many compact spaces that are not second-countable. * A
metric space In mathematics, a metric space is a Set (mathematics), set together with a notion of ''distance'' between its Element (mathematics), elements, usually called point (geometry), points. The distance is measured by a function (mathematics), functi ...
is Lindelöf if and only if it is separable, and if and only if it is
second-countable In topology, a second-countable space, also called a completely separable space, is a topological space whose topology has a countable base. More explicitly, a topological space T is second-countable if there exists some countable collection \mat ...
. * Every regular Lindelöf space is normal. * Every regular Lindelöf space is
paracompact In mathematics, a paracompact space is a topological space in which every open cover has an open Cover (topology)#Refinement, refinement that is locally finite collection, locally finite. These spaces were introduced by . Every compact space is par ...
. * A countable union of Lindelöf subspaces of a topological space is Lindelöf. * Every closed subspace of a Lindelöf space is Lindelöf. Consequently, every Fσ set in a Lindelöf space is Lindelöf. * Arbitrary subspaces of a Lindelöf space need not be Lindelöf. * The continuous image of a Lindelöf space is Lindelöf. * The product of a Lindelöf space and a compact space is Lindelöf. * The product of a Lindelöf space and a
σ-compact space In mathematics, a topological space is said to be ''σ''-compact if it is the union of countably many compact subspaces. A space is said to be ''σ''-locally compact if it is both ''σ''-compact and (weakly) locally compact. That terminology ...
is Lindelöf. This is a corollary to the previous property. * The product of two Lindelöf spaces need not be Lindelöf. For example, the Sorgenfrey line S is Lindelöf, but the Sorgenfrey plane S \times S is not Lindelöf. * In a Lindelöf space, every locally finite family of nonempty subsets is at most countable.


Properties of hereditarily Lindelöf spaces

* A space is hereditarily Lindelöf if and only if every open subspace of it is Lindelöf. * Hereditarily Lindelöf spaces are closed under taking countable unions, subspaces, and continuous images. * A regular Lindelöf space is hereditarily Lindelöf if and only if it is perfectly normal. * Every second-countable space is hereditarily Lindelöf. * Every countable space is hereditarily Lindelöf. * Every Suslin space is hereditarily Lindelöf. * Every Radon measure on a hereditarily Lindelöf space is moderated.


Example: the Sorgenfrey plane is not Lindelöf

The product of Lindelöf spaces is not necessarily Lindelöf. The usual example of this is the Sorgenfrey plane \mathbb, which is the product of the
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\Reals under the half-open interval topology with itself.
Open set In mathematics, an open set is a generalization of an Interval (mathematics)#Definitions_and_terminology, open interval in the real line. In a metric space (a Set (mathematics), set with a metric (mathematics), distance defined between every two ...
s in the Sorgenfrey plane are unions of half-open rectangles that include the south and west edges and omit the north and east edges, including the northwest, northeast, and southeast corners. The antidiagonal of \mathbb is the set of points (x, y) such that x + y = 0. Consider the open covering of \mathbb which consists of: # The set of all rectangles (-\infty, x) \times (-\infty,y), where (x, y) is on the antidiagonal. # The set of all rectangles [x, +\infty) \times [y,+\infty), where (x, y) is on the antidiagonal. The thing to notice here is that each point on the antidiagonal is contained in exactly one set of the covering, so all the (uncountably many) sets of item (2) above are needed. Another way to see that S is not Lindelöf is to note that the antidiagonal defines a closed and uncountable discrete space, discrete subspace of S. This subspace is not Lindelöf, and so the whole space cannot be Lindelöf either (as closed subspaces of Lindelöf spaces are also Lindelöf).


Generalisation

The following definition generalises the definitions of compact and Lindelöf: a topological space is \kappa''-compact'' (or \kappa''-Lindelöf''), where \kappa is any
cardinal Cardinal or The Cardinal most commonly refers to * Cardinalidae, a family of North and South American birds **''Cardinalis'', genus of three species in the family Cardinalidae ***Northern cardinal, ''Cardinalis cardinalis'', the common cardinal of ...
, if every open cover has a subcover of cardinality ''strictly'' less than \kappa. Compact is then \aleph_0-compact and Lindelöf is then \aleph_1-compact. The ', or ''Lindelöf number'' l(X), is the smallest cardinal \kappa such that every open cover of the space X has a subcover of size at most \kappa. In this notation, X is Lindelöf if l(X) = \aleph_0. The Lindelöf number as defined above does not distinguish between compact spaces and Lindelöf non-compact spaces. Some authors gave the name ''Lindelöf number'' to a different notion: the smallest cardinal \kappa such that every open cover of the space X has a subcover of size strictly less than \kappa. In this latter (and less used) sense the Lindelöf number is the smallest cardinal \kappa such that a topological space X is \kappa-compact. This notion is sometimes also called the ' of the space X..


See also

* *


Notes


References

* Engelking, Ryszard, ''General Topology'', Heldermann Verlag Berlin, 1989. * * * * Willard, Stephen. ''General Topology'', Dover Publications (2004)


Further reading

* https://dantopology.wordpress.com/2012/05/03/when-is-a-lindelof-space-normal/ {{DEFAULTSORT:Lindelof space Compactness (mathematics) General topology Properties of topological spaces