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Encyclopedia > Order topology

In mathematics, the order topology is a topology that can be defined on any totally ordered set. It is a natural generalization of the topology of the real numbers to arbitrary totally ordered sets.


If X is a totally ordered set, and a and b are elements of X, we can define the open intervals (a, b) = {x : a < x and x < b}, (−∞, b) = {x : x < b}, (a, ∞) = {x : a < x} and (−∞, ∞) = X. The order topology on X consists all sets that are a union of (possibly infinitely many) such open intervals. The order topology makes X into a normal Hausdorff space. The open intervals form a base for the order topology.


Several interesting variants of the order topology can be given:

  • The left order topology on X is the topology whose open sets consist of intervals of the form (a, ∞).
  • The right order topology on X is the topology whose open sets consist of intervals of the form (−∞, b).

The left and right order topologies can be used to give counterexamples in general topology. For example, the left or right order topology on a bounded set provides an example of a compact space that is not Hausdorff.


See Also


  Results from FactBites:
 
PlanetMath: order topology (148 words)
defined by this ordering, the induced order topology.
The subspace topology is always finer than the induced order topology, but they are not in general the same.
This is version 5 of order topology, born on 2002-01-06, modified 2006-10-22.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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