Science Fair Project Encyclopedia
Axiom of countability
In mathematics, an axiom of countability is a property of certain mathematical objects (usually in a category) that requires the existence of a countable set with certain properties, while without it such sets might not exist.
Important countability axioms for topological spaces:
- first-countable spaces: every point has a countable local base,
- second-countable spaces: the topology has a countable base,
- separable spaces: there exists a countable dense subspace,
- Lindelöf spaces: every open cover has a countable subcover,
- σ-compact spaces: there exists a countable cover by compact spaces,
These axioms are not all unrelated. In particular, every second-countable space is first-countable, separable, and Lindelöf. Also, every σ-compact space is Lindelöf. For metric spaces, first-countability is automatic, and second-countability, separability, and the Lindelöf property are all equivalent.
Other examples:
- sigma-finite measure spaces
- lattices of countable type
10-26-2009 08:16:03
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The contents of this article is licensed from www.wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. Click here to see the transparent copy and copyright details


