K-topologyIn mathematics, particularly in the field of topology, the K-topology,[1] also called Smirnov's deleted sequence topology,[2] is a topology on the set R of real numbers which has some interesting properties. Relative to the standard topology on R, the set is not closed since it doesn't contain its limit point 0. Relative to the K-topology however, the set K is declared to be closed by adding more open sets to the standard topology on R. Thus the K-topology on R is strictly finer than the standard topology on R. It is mostly useful for counterexamples in basic topology. In particular, it provides an example of a Hausdorff space that is not regular. Formal definitionLet R be the set of real numbers and let The K-topology on R is the topology obtained by taking as a base the collection of all open intervals together with all sets of the form [1] The neighborhoods of a point are the same as in the usual Euclidean topology. The neighborhoods of are of the form , where is a neighborhood of in the usual topology.[3] The open sets in the K-topology are precisely the sets of the form with open in the usual Euclidean topology and [2] PropertiesThroughout this section, T will denote the K-topology and (R, T) will denote the set of all real numbers with the K-topology as a topological space. 1. The K-topology is strictly finer than the standard topology on R. Hence it is Hausdorff, but not compact. 2. The K-topology is not regular, because K is a closed set not containing , but the set and the point have no disjoint neighborhoods. And as a further consequence, the quotient space of the K-topology obtained by collapsing K to a point is not Hausdorff. This illustrates that a quotient of a Hausdorff space need not be Hausdorff. 3. The K-topology is connected. However, it is not path connected; it has precisely two path components: and 4. The K-topology is not locally path connected at and not locally connected at . But it is locally path connected and locally connected everywhere else. 5. The closed interval [0,1] is not compact as a subspace of (R, T) since it is not even limit point compact (K is an infinite closed discrete subspace of (R, T), hence has no limit point in [0,1]). More generally, no subspace A of (R, T) containing K is compact. See alsoNotes
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