- First-countable space
In
topology , a branch ofmathematics , a first-countable space is atopological space satisfying the "firstaxiom of countability ". Specifically, a space, "X", is said to be first-countable if each point has acountable neighbourhood basis (local base). That is, for each point, "x", in space "X" there exists asequence , "U"1, "U"2, … of open neighborhoods of "x" such that for any open neighborhood, "V", of "x", there exists an integer, "i", with "U""i" contained in "V".Examples and counterexamples
The majority of 'everyday' spaces in
mathematics are first-countable. In particular, everymetric space is first-countable. To see this, note that the set ofopen ball s centered at "x" with radius 1/"n" for integers "n" > 0 form a countable local base at "x".An example of a space which is not first-countable is the
cofinite topology on an uncountable set (such as thereal line ).Another counterexample is the
ordinal space ω1+1 = [0,ω1] where ω1 is the smallestuncountable ordinal number . The element ω1 is alimit point of the subset[ 0,ω1) even though no sequence of elements in[ 0,ω1) has the element ω1 as its limit. In particular, the point ω1 in the space ω1+1 = [0,ω1] does not have a countable local base. The subspace ω1 =[ 0,ω1) is first-countable however, since ω1 is the only such point.Properties
One of the most important properties of first-countable spaces is that given a subset "A", a point "x" lies in the closure of "A" if and only if there exists a
sequence {"x""n"} in "A" which converges to "x". This has consequences for limits and continuity. In particular, if "f" is a function on a first-countable space, then "f" has a limit "L" at the point "x" if and only if for every sequence "x""n" → "x", where "x""n" ≠ "x" for all "n", we have "f"("x""n") → "L". Also, if "f" is a function on a first-countable space, then "f" is continuous if and only if whenever "x""n" → "x", then "f"("x""n") → "f"("x").In first-countable spaces, sequential compactness and countable compactness are equivalent properties. However, there exist examples of sequentially compact, first-countable spaces which aren't compact (these are necessarily non-metric spaces). One such space is the ordinal space
[ 0,ω1). Every first-countable space is compactly generated.Every subspace of a first-countable space is first-countable. Any countable product of a first-countable space is first-countable, although uncountable products need not be.
ee also
*
Second-countable space
*Separable space
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