Insertion of continuous real functions on spaces, bispaces, ordered spaces and pointfree spaces -- a common root (Q535362): Difference between revisions

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A biframe is a triple consisting of a frame (called the total part of the biframe) and two subframes which together generate the total part. In the same way that a frame has its co-frame of sublocales which can be made into a frame by reverse inclusion, a biframe also has what could informally be called a ``biframe of sublocales''. For a given biframe, the authors define a real function (not necessarily continuous) on the biframe to be a real function on the first part of the ``biframe of sublocales'' which is a biframe homomorphism from the biframe of reals to the given biframe. This done, they then characterise normal and extremally disconnected biframes in terms of insertion of continuous real functions between given lower and upper semicontinuous real functions. The various insertion-type theorems (and characterisations of normality and extremal disconnectedness) for frames, topological spaces, ordered topological spaces and bispaces appear as special cases of similar results for biframes. This fully justifies the appendage ``a common root'' in the title of the paper.
Property / review text: A biframe is a triple consisting of a frame (called the total part of the biframe) and two subframes which together generate the total part. In the same way that a frame has its co-frame of sublocales which can be made into a frame by reverse inclusion, a biframe also has what could informally be called a ``biframe of sublocales''. For a given biframe, the authors define a real function (not necessarily continuous) on the biframe to be a real function on the first part of the ``biframe of sublocales'' which is a biframe homomorphism from the biframe of reals to the given biframe. This done, they then characterise normal and extremally disconnected biframes in terms of insertion of continuous real functions between given lower and upper semicontinuous real functions. The various insertion-type theorems (and characterisations of normality and extremal disconnectedness) for frames, topological spaces, ordered topological spaces and bispaces appear as special cases of similar results for biframes. This fully justifies the appendage ``a common root'' in the title of the paper. / rank
 
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Property / reviewed by
 
Property / reviewed by: Themba Dube / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 06D22 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 26A15 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 54C30 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 54D15 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 54E55 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 54F05 / rank
 
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Property / zbMATH DE Number
 
Property / zbMATH DE Number: 5886918 / rank
 
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Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
frame
Property / zbMATH Keywords: frame / rank
 
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biframe
Property / zbMATH Keywords: biframe / rank
 
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bitopological space
Property / zbMATH Keywords: bitopological space / rank
 
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Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
ordered topological space
Property / zbMATH Keywords: ordered topological space / rank
 
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Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
locale
Property / zbMATH Keywords: locale / rank
 
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Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
localic real function
Property / zbMATH Keywords: localic real function / rank
 
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normal biframe
Property / zbMATH Keywords: normal biframe / rank
 
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extremally disconnected biframe
Property / zbMATH Keywords: extremally disconnected biframe / rank
 
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Insertion of continuous real functions on spaces, bispaces, ordered spaces and pointfree spaces -- a common root
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    Insertion of continuous real functions on spaces, bispaces, ordered spaces and pointfree spaces -- a common root (English)
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    11 May 2011
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    A biframe is a triple consisting of a frame (called the total part of the biframe) and two subframes which together generate the total part. In the same way that a frame has its co-frame of sublocales which can be made into a frame by reverse inclusion, a biframe also has what could informally be called a ``biframe of sublocales''. For a given biframe, the authors define a real function (not necessarily continuous) on the biframe to be a real function on the first part of the ``biframe of sublocales'' which is a biframe homomorphism from the biframe of reals to the given biframe. This done, they then characterise normal and extremally disconnected biframes in terms of insertion of continuous real functions between given lower and upper semicontinuous real functions. The various insertion-type theorems (and characterisations of normality and extremal disconnectedness) for frames, topological spaces, ordered topological spaces and bispaces appear as special cases of similar results for biframes. This fully justifies the appendage ``a common root'' in the title of the paper.
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    frame
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    biframe
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    bitopological space
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    ordered topological space
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    locale
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    localic real function
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    normal biframe
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    extremally disconnected biframe
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