Tri-quotient maps become inductively perfect with the aid of consonance and continuous selections (Q1568413)
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English | Tri-quotient maps become inductively perfect with the aid of consonance and continuous selections |
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Tri-quotient maps become inductively perfect with the aid of consonance and continuous selections (English)
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12 November 2000
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The author studies the interactions between consonant spaces and various classes of maps which are related as follows: inductively perfect \(\to\) compact-harmonious \(\to\) harmonious \(\to\) tri-quotient, and compact-harmonious \(\to\) compact-covering. \{Note: Maps called ``compact-harmonious'' (resp. ``harmonious'') in this paper are called ``harmonious'' (resp. ``point-harmonious'') in the papers by \textit{A. V. Ostrovsky} reviewed above\}. Some results: (1) Sieve-complete spaces are consonant. \{As the author observes, this was already proved, with different terminology, by \textit{V. V. Uspenskij} in [Proc. Am. Math. Soc. 123, No. 11, 3567-3574 (1995; Zbl 0845.54010)]\}. (2) Tri-quotient maps with consonant fibers are harmonious. (3) Harmonious maps \(f:X\to Y\) from a monotonic \(p\)-space \(X\) (in particular, from a metrizable or sieve-complete space \(X)\) to a countable space \(Y\) are inductively perfect. \{Note: In the first sentence of the abstract, ``harmonious'' should read ``compact-harmonious'' (using the author's definitions)\}.
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harmonious maps
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consonant spaces
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sieve-complete space
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