In mathematics, in the field of topology, a topological space is called supercompact if there is a subbasis such that every open cover of the topological space from elements of the subbasis has a subcover with at most two subbasis elements. Supercompactness and the related notion of superextension was introduced by J. de Groot in 1967.[1]
Examples
By the Alexander subbase theorem, every supercompact space is compact. Conversely, many (but not all) compact spaces are supercompact. The following are examples of supercompact spaces:
A product of supercompact spaces is supercompact (like a similar statement about compactness, Tychonoff's theorem, it is equivalent to the axiom of choice.)[3]
A continuous image of a supercompact space need not be supercompact.[5]
In a supercompact space (or any continuous image of one), the cluster point of any countable subset is the limit of a nontrivial convergent sequence.[6]
Banaschewski, B. (1993), "Supercompactness, products and the axiom of choice", Kyungpook Math Journal, 33 (1): 111–114
Bell, Murray G. (1978), "Not all compact Hausdorff spaces are supercompact", General Topology and Its Applications, 8 (2): 151–155, doi:10.1016/0016-660X(78)90046-6
Bula, W.; Nikiel, J.; Tuncali, H. M.; Tymchatyn, E. D. (1992), "Continuous images of ordered compacta are regular supercompact", Topology and Its Applications, 45 (3): 203–221, doi:10.1016/0166-8641(92)90005-K
de Groot, J. (1969), "Supercompactness and superextensions", in Flachsmeyer, J.; Poppe, H.; Terpe, F. (eds.), Contributions to extension theory of topological structures. Proceedings of the Symposium held in Berlin, August 14—19, 1967, Berlin: VEB Deutscher Verlag der Wissenschaften