If C is a cone in a TVS X then C is normal if , where is the neighborhood filter at the origin, , and is the C-saturated hull of a subset U of X.[2]
If C is a cone in a TVS X (over the real or complex numbers), then the following are equivalent:[2]
C is a normal cone.
For every filter in X, if then .
There exists a neighborhood base in X such that implies .
and if X is a vector space over the reals then also:[2]
There exists a neighborhood base at the origin consisting of convex, balanced, C-saturated sets.
There exists a generating family of semi-norms on X such that for all and .
If the topology on X is locally convex then the closure of a normal cone is a normal cone.[2]
Properties
If C is a normal cone in X and B is a bounded subset of X then is bounded; in particular, every interval is bounded.[2]
If X is Hausdorff then every normal cone in X is a proper cone.[2]
Properties
Let X be an ordered vector space over the reals that is finite-dimensional. Then the order of X is Archimedean if and only if the positive cone of X is closed for the unique topology under which X is a Hausdorff TVS.[1]
Let X be an ordered vector space over the reals with positive cone C. Then the following are equivalent:[1]
the order of X is regular.
C is sequentially closed for some Hausdorff locally convex TVS topology on X and distinguishes points in X
the order of X is Archimedean and C is normal for some Hausdorff locally convex TVS topology on X.