Closure operator
In topology, a preclosure operator or Čech closure operator is a map between subsets of a set, similar to a topological closure operator, except that it is not required to be idempotent. That is, a preclosure operator obeys only three of the four Kuratowski closure axioms.
Definition
A preclosure operator on a set
is a map
![{\displaystyle [\ \ ]_{p}:{\mathcal {P}}(X)\to {\mathcal {P}}(X)}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/e02e5f8b6df4e0b7af91f753e66ff440867cc322)
where
is the power set of
The preclosure operator has to satisfy the following properties:
(Preservation of nullary unions);
(Extensivity);
(Preservation of binary unions).
The last axiom implies the following:
- 4.
implies
.
Topology
A set
is closed (with respect to the preclosure) if
. A set
is open (with respect to the preclosure) if its complement
is closed. The collection of all open sets generated by the preclosure operator is a topology;[1] however, the above topology does not capture the notion of convergence associated to the operator, one should consider a pretopology, instead.[2]
Examples
Premetrics
Given
a premetric on
, then
![{\displaystyle [A]_{p}=\{x\in X:d(x,A)=0\}}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/ac51f2a717633edf11f1884767acb24c460b3b46)
is a preclosure on
Sequential spaces
The sequential closure operator
is a preclosure operator. Given a topology
with respect to which the sequential closure operator is defined, the topological space
is a sequential space if and only if the topology
generated by
is equal to
that is, if
See also
References
- ^ Eduard Čech, Zdeněk Frolík, Miroslav Katětov, Topological spaces Prague: Academia, Publishing House of the Czechoslovak Academy of
Sciences, 1966, Theorem 14 A.9 [1].
- ^ S. Dolecki, An Initiation into Convergence Theory, in F. Mynard, E. Pearl (editors), Beyond Topology,
AMS, Contemporary Mathematics, 2009.