Quasi-separated spaces #
A topological space is quasi-separated if the intersections of any pairs of compact open subsets are still compact. Notable examples include spectral spaces, Noetherian spaces, and Hausdorff spaces.
A non-example is the interval [0, 1] with doubled origin: the two copies of [0, 1] are compact
open subsets, but their intersection (0, 1] is not.
Main results #
IsQuasiSeparated: A subsetsof a topological space is quasi-separated if the intersections of any pairs of compact open subsets ofsare still compact.QuasiSeparatedSpace: A topological space is quasi-separated if the intersections of any pairs of compact open subsets are still compact.QuasiSeparatedSpace.of_isOpenEmbedding: Iff : α → βis an open embedding, andβis a quasi-separated space, then so isα.
A subset s of a topological space is quasi-separated if the intersections of any pairs of
compact open subsets of s are still compact.
Note that this is equivalent to s being a QuasiSeparatedSpace only when s is open.
Equations
Instances For
A topological space is quasi-separated if the intersections of any pairs of compact open subsets are still compact.
The intersection of two open compact subsets of a quasi-separated space is compact.