Hereditary normality versus countable tightness in countably compact spaces (Q1203843)

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Hereditary normality versus countable tightness in countably compact spaces
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    Hereditary normality versus countable tightness in countably compact spaces (English)
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    18 February 1993
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    This paper investigates the question of the existence of separable countably compact hereditarily normal spaces of uncountable tightness. The author notes that no such space exists if \(2^{\aleph_ 0}<2^{\aleph_ 1}\). There are essentially two main results. The first is that the existence of such a space is equivalent to the existence of a hereditarily normal ``Franklin-Rajagopalan space'' (i.e. a locally compact extension, \(\gamma N\), of the countable discrete space \(N\) whose remainder is homeomorphic to the ordinal space \(\omega_ 1\)). The one- point compactification of a hereditarily normal \(\gamma N\) will be a compact hereditarily normal space of uncountable tightness. The second result is a clever argument to establish the consistency of the existence of such spaces. The model constructed is a model of Martin's Axiom (MA) plus \(2^{\aleph_ 0}=\aleph_ 3\) (and requires that the cub filter on \(\omega_ 1\) is \(\omega_ 2\)-generated). It is remarked that it has been shown to follow from the Open Coloring Axiom (OCA) that there is no hereditarily normal \(\gamma N\) (hence this is consistent with MA plus \(2^{\aleph_ 0} = 2^{\aleph_ 1} = \aleph_ 2\)) and that the existence of a hereditarily normal \(\gamma N\) is consistent with MA plus \(2^{\aleph_ 0} = \aleph_ 2\).
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    separable countably compact hereditarily normal spaces of uncountable tightness
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    hereditarily normal Franklin-Rajagopalan space
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    locally compact extension
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    one-point compactification
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    Martin's axiom
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    open coloring axioms
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