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Topology General topologyIn mathematics, a paracompact space is a topological space in which every open cover admits an open locally finite refinement. (Paracompact spaces are often required to be Hausdorff, but we will not make that assumption in this article.)
1 Definitions of relevant terms
- A cover of a set X is a collection of subsets of X whose union is X. In symbols, if U = {Uα : α in A} is an indexed family of subsets of X, then U is a cover iff
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- A cover of a topological space X is open if all its members are open sets. In symbols, a cover U is an open cover if U is contained in T, where T is the topology on X.
- A refinement of a cover of a space X is a new cover of the same space such that every set in the new cover is a subset of some set in the old cover. In symbols, the cover V = {Vβ : β in B} is a refinement of the cover U = {Uα : α in A} iff, for any Vβ in V, there exists some Uα in U such that Vβ is contained in Uα.
- An open cover of a space X is locally finite if every point of the space has a neighborhood which intersects only finiteIn mathematics, a set is called finite if and only if there is a bijection between the set and some set of the form {1, 2,. n with n isin N . It is a theorem that a set is finite if and only if there exists no bijection between the set and any of its proply many sets in the cover. In symbols, U = {Uα : α in A} is locally finite iff, for any x in X, there exists some neighbourhood V(x) of x such that the set
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- is finite.
Note the similarity between the definitions of compactSeveral specialized usages of the terms compact and compactness exist. Multiple definitions of the term "compact" are found in mathematics: The most common usage relates to topology, where one considers compact spaces . This article also includes the clos and paracompact: for paracompact, we replace "subcover" by "open refinement" and "finite" by "locally finite". Both of these changes are significant: if we take the above definition of paracompact and change "open refinement" back to "subcover", or "locally finite" back to "finite", we end up with the compact spaces in both cases.
2 Examples
- Every compact spaceIn mathematics, a compact space is a space that resembles a closed and bounded subset of Euclidean space R n in that it is "small" in a certain sense and "contains all its limit points". The modern general definition calls a topological space compact if e is paracompact.
- Every metric spaceIn mathematics, a metric space is a set (or "space") where a distance between points is defined. History Maurice Frechet introduced metric spaces in his work Sur quelques points du calcul fonctionnel Rendic. Palermo 22(1906) 1-74. Formal definition Formal (hence, every metrisable space) is paracompact.
- Every locally compact second-countable space is paracompact.
- Every regular Lindelöf space is paracompact.
- The lower limit topology on the real line is paracompact, even though it is neither compact, locally compact, second countable, nor metrisable.
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