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mathematics Mathematics is a field of study that discovers and organizes methods, Mathematical theory, theories and theorems that are developed and Mathematical proof, proved for the needs of empirical sciences and mathematics itself. There are many ar ...
, the lower limit topology or right half-open interval topology is a
topology Topology (from the Greek language, Greek words , and ) is the branch of mathematics concerned with the properties of a Mathematical object, geometric object that are preserved under Continuous function, continuous Deformation theory, deformat ...
defined on \mathbb, the set of
real numbers In mathematics, a real number is a number that can be used to measurement, measure a continuous variable, continuous one-dimensional quantity such as a time, duration or temperature. Here, ''continuous'' means that pairs of values can have arbi ...
; it is different from the standard topology on \mathbb (generated by the
open interval In mathematics, a real interval is the set (mathematics), set of all real numbers lying between two fixed endpoints with no "gaps". Each endpoint is either a real number or positive or negative infinity, indicating the interval extends without ...
s) and has a number of interesting properties. It is the topology generated by the basis of all half-open intervals /nowiki>''a'',''b''), where ''a'' and ''b'' are real numbers. The resulting topological space is called the Sorgenfrey line after Robert Sorgenfrey">topological space">/nowiki>''a'',''b''), where ''a'' and ''b'' are real numbers. The resulting topological space is called the Sorgenfrey line after Robert Sorgenfrey or the arrow and is sometimes written \mathbb_l. Like the Cantor set and the long line (topology), long line, the Sorgenfrey line often serves as a useful counterexample to many otherwise plausible-sounding conjectures in general topology. The product space, product of \mathbb_l with itself is also a useful counterexample, known as the Sorgenfrey plane. In complete analogy, one can also define the upper limit topology, or left half-open interval topology.


Properties

* The lower limit topology is finer (has more open sets) than the standard topology on the real numbers (which is generated by the open intervals). The reason is that every open interval can be written as a (countably infinite) union of half-open intervals. * For any real a and b, the interval clopen in \mathbb_l (i.e., both open set">open and closed set">closed). Furthermore, for all real a, the sets \ and \ are also clopen. This shows that the Sorgenfrey line is totally disconnected. * Any compact space, compact subset of \mathbb_l must be an at most countable set. To see this, consider a non-empty compact subset C\subseteq\mathbb_l. Fix an x \in C, consider the following open cover of C: :: \bigl\ \cup \Bigl\. :Since C is compact, this cover has a finite subcover, and hence there exists a real number a(x) such that the interval (a(x), x] contains no point of C apart from x. This is true for all x\in C. Now choose a rational number q(x) \in (a(x), x]\cap\mathbb. Since the intervals (a(x), x], parametrized by x \in C, are pairwise disjoint, the function q: C \to \mathbb is injective, and so C is at most countable. * The name "lower limit topology" comes from the following fact: a sequence (or net (topology), net) (x_\alpha) in \mathbb_l converges to the limit L
if and only if In logic and related fields such as mathematics and philosophy, "if and only if" (often shortened as "iff") is paraphrased by the biconditional, a logical connective between statements. The biconditional is true in two cases, where either bo ...
it "approaches L from the right", meaning for every \epsilon>0 there exists an index \alpha_0 such that \forall\alpha \geq \alpha_0 : L \leq x_\alpha < L+\epsilon. The Sorgenfrey line can thus be used to study right-sided limits: if f: \mathbb \to \mathbb is a function, then the ordinary right-sided limit of f at x (when the codomain carries the standard topology) is the same as the usual limit of f at x when the domain is equipped with the lower limit topology and the codomain carries the standard topology. * In terms of separation axioms, \mathbb_l is a perfectly normal Hausdorff space. * In terms of countability axioms, \mathbb_l is first-countable and separable, but not second-countable. * In terms of compactness properties, \mathbb_l is Lindelöf and paracompact, but not σ-compact nor locally compact. * \mathbb_l is not metrizable, since separable metric spaces are second-countable. However, the topology of a Sorgenfrey line is generated by a quasimetric. * \mathbb_l is a Baire space. * \mathbb_l does not have any connected compactifications.Adam Emeryk, Władysław Kulpa. The Sorgenfrey line has no connected compactification. ''Comm. Math. Univ. Carolinae'' 18 (1977), 483–487.


See also

* List of topologies


References

* {{Citation , last1=Steen , first1=Lynn Arthur , author1-link=Lynn Arthur Steen , last2=Seebach , first2=J. Arthur Jr. , author2-link=J. Arthur Seebach, Jr. , title= Counterexamples in Topology , orig-year=1978 , publisher=
Springer-Verlag Springer Science+Business Media, commonly known as Springer, is a German multinational publishing company of books, e-books and peer-reviewed journals in science, humanities, technical and medical (STM) publishing. Originally founded in 1842 in ...
, location=Berlin, New York , edition= Dover reprint of 1978 , isbn=978-0-486-68735-3 , mr=507446 , year=1995 Topological spaces