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Encyclopedia > Second countable

In topology, a second-countable space is a topological space satisfying the "second axiom of countability". Specifically, a space is said to be second countable if its topology has a countable base. Like other countability axioms, the property of being second-countable restricts the number open sets that a space can have. In general, the finer the topology, the less likely it is to be second countable.


Most "nice" spaces in mathematics are second-countable. For example, Euclidean space (Rn) with its usual topology is second-countable. Although, the usual base of open balls is not countable, one can restrict to the set of all open balls with rational radii and whose centers have rational coordinates. This restricted set is countable and still forms a base.


Properties

Second-countability is a stronger notion than first-countability. Recall that a space is first countable if each point has a countable local base. Given a base for a topology and a point x, the set of all basis sets containing x form a local base at x. Thus, if one has a countable base for a topology then one clearly has a countable local base at every point.


Second-countability implies certain other topological properties. Specifically, every second-countable space is separable (has a countable dense subset) and Lindelöf (every open cover has a countable subcover). The reverse implications do not hold. For example, the lower limit topology on the real line is first-countable, separable, and Lindelöf, but not second-countable. For metric spaces, however, the properties of being second-countable, separable, and Lindelöf are all equivalent.


In second-countable spaces—as in metric spaces—compactness, sequential compactness, and countable compactness are all equivalent properties.


Every regular second-countable space is actually completely normal as well as paracompact (since every regular Lindelöf space is paracompact).


Other properties:

  • Every subspace of a second-countable space is second countable
  • Every collection of disjoint open sets in a second-countable space is countable
  • Any countable product of a second-countable space is second countable, although uncountable products need not be.
  • Quotients of second-countable spaces need not be second countable.

  Results from FactBites:
 
Second-countable space - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (409 words)
In topology, a second-countable space is a topological space satisfying the "second axiom of countability".
Although the usual base of open balls is not countable, one can restrict to the set of all open balls with rational radii and whose centers have rational coordinates.
In second-countable spaces—as in metric spaces—compactness, sequential compactness, and countable compactness are all equivalent properties.
PlanetMath: second countable (119 words)
line is both Lindelöf and separable, but not second countable.
See Also: separable, Lindelöf, every second countable space is separable, Lindelöf theorem, Urysohn metrization theorem, first axiom of countability
This is version 12 of second countable, born on 2002-01-01, modified 2005-02-11.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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