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Formally, a topological space is a set X together with a collection T of subsets of X satisfying the following axioms:
The set T is a topology on X. The sets in T are the open sets, and their complements in X are the closed sets. The elements of X are points.
A variety of useful and not-so-useful topologies can be placed on nearly any set to form a topological space. When every set in a topology T1 is also found in a topology T2, we say that T2 is finer than T1, and T1 is coarser than T2. A proof which relies only on the existence of certain open sets will also hold for any finer topology, and similarly a proof that relies only on certain sets not being open applies to any coarser topology. The terms larger and smaller are sometimes used in place of finer and coarser, respectively. The terms stronger and weaker are also used in literature, but with little agreement on the meaning, so one should always be sure of an author's convention when reading.
A function between topological spaces is said to be continuous if the inverse image of every open set is open. This is an attempt to capture the intuition that there are no "breaks" or "separations" in the function. A homeomorphismThis word should not be confused with homomorphism. In topology, two geometrical objects (or "spaces") are called homeomorphic if, roughly speaking, the first can be deformed into the second by stretching and bending; cutting is also allowed, but only if is a bijectionIn mathematics, a bijection bijective function or one-to-one correspondence is a function that is both injective ("one-to-one") and surjective ("onto"), and therefore bijections are also called one-to-one and onto . Intuitively, a bijective function creat that is continuous and whose inverseIn mathematical analysis, an inverse function is in simple terms a function which "does the reverse" of a given function. More formally, if f is a function with domain X, then f -1 is its inverse function if and only if for every we have: :. For example, is also continuous. Two spaces are said to be homeomorphic if there exists a homeomorphism between them. From the standpoint of topology, homeomorphic spaces are essentially identical.
The category of topological spacesCategory theory The category Top has topological spaces as objects and continuous maps as morphisms. This is a category because the composition of two continuous maps is again continuous. The study of Top and of properties of topological spaces using the, Top, with topological spaces as objects and continuous functions as morphismIn mathematics, a morphism is an abstraction of a function or mapping between two spaces. The word can mean different things depending on the type of space in question. In set theory, for example, morphisms are just functions, in group theory they are gros is one of the fundamental categories in mathematics. The attempt to classify the objects of this category by invariants has motivated and generated entire areas of research, such as homotopy theory, homology theory, and K-theory, to name just a few.