In mathematics, a topological space is sequentially compact if every sequence of points in has a convergent subsequence converging to a point in .

Every metric space is naturally a topological space, and for metric spaces, the notions of compactness and sequential compactness are equivalent (using the axiom of countable choice). However, there exist sequentially compact topological spaces that are not compact, and compact topological spaces that are not sequentially compact.

Examples and properties

edit

The space of all real numbers with the standard topology is not sequentially compact; the sequence given by for all natural numbers is a sequence that has no convergent subsequence.

On a first countable space, a sequence has a convergent subsequence if and only if

is nomempty. Indeed, a limit of a convergent subsequence is necessarily in the above intersection (this direction holds for any topological space). Conversely, if is in the above intersection, then let be a countable neighborhood base at . Then, inductively, choose integers such that is a least integer with the property (1) and (2) , which is possible since is a well-ordered set. Then .

A point in the above intersection is called a cluster point. Thus, for first countable spaces, the definition of a sequentially compact space is the same as saying that each sequence in the space has a cluster point.

If a space is a metric space, then it is sequentially compact if and only if it is compact (cf. Heine–Borel theorem § Generalization).[1] Here is how to see this, using only the countable Choice. We have to show "sequentially compact" implies "compact". First, we note is totally bounded, meaning for each , there is a finite cover of consisting of open balls of radius . Indeed, if it fails for some , by countable Choice, choose a sequence such that

This sequence has no convergent subsequence, a contradiction. It follows that has a countable base. Hence, it is enough to show is countably compact; i.e., each descending sequence of nonempty closed subsets has nonempty intersection. But this is clear since

for some sequence with .

The first uncountable ordinal with the order topology is an example of a sequentially compact topological space that is not compact. The topological product of copies of the closed unit interval is an example of a compact space that is not sequentially compact.[2]

edit

A topological space is said to be limit point compact if every infinite subset of has a limit point in , and countably compact if every countable open cover has a finite subcover. In a metric space, the notions of sequential compactness, limit point compactness, countable compactness and compactness are all equivalent (if one assumes the axiom of choice).

In a sequential (Hausdorff) space sequential compactness is equivalent to countable compactness.[3]

There is also a notion of a one-point sequential compactification—the idea is that the non convergent sequences should all converge to the extra point.[4]

See also

edit

Notes

edit
  1. ^ Willard, 17G, p. 125.
  2. ^ Steen and Seebach, Example 105, pp. 125—126.
  3. ^ Engelking, General Topology, Theorem 3.10.31
    K.P. Hart, Jun-iti Nagata, J.E. Vaughan (editors), Encyclopedia of General Topology, Chapter d3 (by P. Simon)
  4. ^ Brown, Ronald, "Sequentially proper maps and a sequential compactification", J. London Math Soc. (2) 7 (1973) 515-522.

References

edit
  • Munkres, James (1999). Topology (2nd ed.). Prentice Hall. ISBN 0-13-181629-2.
  • Steen, Lynn A. and Seebach, J. Arthur Jr.; Counterexamples in Topology, Holt, Rinehart and Winston (1970). ISBN 0-03-079485-4.
  • Willard, Stephen (2004). General Topology. Dover Publications. ISBN 0-486-43479-6.


📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Compact space

subsets of Euclidean space, the analogous statement is sequential compactness: a set is compact if and only if every infinite sequence in the set has a

Bolzano–Weierstrass theorem

\mathbb {R} ^{n}} is sequentially compact if and only if it is closed and bounded. The theorem is sometimes called the sequential compactness theorem. The Bolzano–Weierstrass

Tychonoff's theorem

lead to a compactness criterion generalizing sequential compactness in metrizable spaces that will be as easily applied to deduce the compactness of products

Limit point compact

generalizes a property of compact spaces. In a metric space, limit point compactness, compactness, and sequential compactness are all equivalent. For general

Second-countable space

second-countable spaces—as in metric spaces—compactness, sequential compactness, and countable compactness are all equivalent properties. Urysohn's metrization

Countably compact space

countably compact space is limit point compact. For T1 spaces, countable compactness and limit point compactness are equivalent. Every sequentially compact space

First-countable space

first-countable spaces, sequential compactness and countable compactness are equivalent properties. However, there exist examples of sequentially compact, first-countable

Helly's selection theorem

functions admits a convergent subsequence. In other words, it is a sequential compactness theorem for the space of uniformly bounded monotone functions. It