Kuratowski closure axioms
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In topology and related branches of mathematics, the Kuratowski closure axioms are a set of axioms which can be used to define a topological structure on a set. They are equivalent to the more commonly used open set definition. They were first introduced by Kazimierz Kuratowski, in a slightly different form that applied only to Hausdorff spaces.
A similar set of axioms can be used to define a topological structure using only the dual notion of interior operator.
Contents |
[edit] Definition
A topological space is a set X with a function
called the closure operator where is the power set of X.
The closure operator has to satisfy the following properties
- (Extensivity)
- (Idempotence)
- (Preservation of binary unions)
- (Preservation of nullary unions)
If the second axiom, that of idempotence, is relaxed, then the axioms define a preclosure operator.
[edit] Notes
Axioms (3) and (4) can be generalised (using a proof by mathematical induction) to the equivalent single statement:
- (Preservation of finitary unions).
[edit] Recovering topological definitions
A function between two topological spaces
is called continuous if for all subsets A of X
A point p is called close to A in if
A is called closed in if . In other words the closed sets of X are the fixed points of the closure operator.