H-closed space

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In mathematics, a Hausdorff space is said to be H-closed, or Hausdorff closed, or absolutely closed if it is closed in every Hausdorff space containing it as a subspace. This property is a generalization of compactness, since a compact subset of a Hausdorff space is closed. Thus, every compact Hausdorff space is H-closed. The notion of an H-closed space has been introduced in 1924 by P. Alexandroff and P. Urysohn.

Examples and equivalent formulations

  • The unit interval [math]\displaystyle{ [0,1] }[/math], endowed with the smallest topology which refines the euclidean topology, and contains [math]\displaystyle{ Q \cap [0,1] }[/math] as an open set is H-closed but not compact.
  • Every regular Hausdorff H-closed space is compact.
  • A Hausdorff space is H-closed if and only if every open cover has a finite subfamily with dense union.

See also

References

  • K.P. Hart, Jun-iti Nagata, J.E. Vaughan (editors), Encyclopedia of General Topology, Chapter d20 (by Jack Porter and Johannes Vermeer)