In mathematics, Esakia spaces are special ordered topological spaces introduced and studied by Leo Esakia in 1974.[1] Esakia spaces play a fundamental role in the study of Heyting algebras, primarily by virtue of the Esakia duality --- the dual equivalence between the category of Heyting algebras and the category of Esakia spaces.
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For a partially ordered set (X,≤) and for x∈ X, let ↓x = {y∈ X : y≤ x} and let ↑x = {y∈ X : x≤ y} . Also, for A⊆ X, let ↓A = {y∈ X : y ≤ x for some x∈ A} and ↑A = {y∈ X : y≥ x for some x∈ A} .
An Esakia space is a Priestley space (X,τ,≤) such that for each clopen subset C of the topological space (X,τ), the set ↓C is also clopen.
There are several equivalent ways to define Esakia spaces.
Theorem[2]: The following conditions are equivalent:
Let (X,≤) and (Y,≤) be partially ordered sets and let f : X → Y be an order-preserving map. The map f is a bounded morphism (also known as p-morphism) if for each x∈ X and y∈ Y, if f(x)≤ y, then there exists z∈ X such that x≤ z and f(z) = y.
Theorem[3]: The following conditions are equivalent:
Let (X, τ, ≤) and (Y, τ′, ≤) be Esakia spaces and let f : X → Y be a map. The map f is called an Esakia morphism if f is a continuous bounded morphism.