The general concept of cleavability of a topological space (Q1203813): Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 14:43, 17 May 2024

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The general concept of cleavability of a topological space
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    The general concept of cleavability of a topological space (English)
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    18 February 1993
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    If \(\mathcal P\) is a class of topological spaces and \(\mathcal M\) a class of (continuous) mappings, then a space \(X\) is said to be \({\mathcal M}\)- cleavable over \(\mathcal P\) if for every \(A\subset X\) there exist \(Y\in{\mathcal P}\) and \(f\in{\mathcal M}\), \(f: X\to Y\), such that \(f(X)= Y\) and \(f^{-1} f(A)= A\). The main result: If a Hausdorff countably compact space \(X\) is cleavable over the class \(\mathcal P\) of all sequential Hausdorff spaces (compact sequential spaces), then \(X\) is also in \(\mathcal P\) (Theorems 23 and 38).
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    cleavable space
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    tightness
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    Fréchet-Urysohn space
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    sequential space
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    countably compact space
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