Wallman compactification: Difference between revisions
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==References== |
==References== |
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*{{springer|id=Wallman_compactification|first=P.S. |last=Aleksandrov}} |
*{{springer|id=Wallman_compactification|first=P.S. |last=Aleksandrov|authorlink = Pavel Aleksandrov}} |
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*{{citation|first=Henry |last=Wallman|authorlink=Henry Wallman|title=Lattices and topological spaces |journal=Annals of Mathematics|volume= 39 |year=1938|issue=1|pages= 112–126 |
*{{citation|first=Henry |last=Wallman|authorlink=Henry Wallman|title=Lattices and topological spaces |journal=[[Annals of Mathematics]]|volume= 39 |year=1938|issue=1|pages= 112–126 |
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|doi=10.2307/1968717|jstor=1968717 }} |
|doi=10.2307/1968717|jstor=1968717 }} |
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Latest revision as of 13:28, 26 September 2024
In mathematics, the Wallman compactification, generally called Wallman–Shanin compactification is a compactification of T1 topological spaces that was constructed by Wallman (1938).
Definition
[edit]The points of the Wallman compactification ωX of a space X are the maximal proper filters in the poset of closed subsets of X. Explicitly, a point of ωX is a family of closed nonempty subsets of X such that is closed under finite intersections, and is maximal among those families that have these properties. For every closed subset F of X, the class ΦF of points of ωX containing F is closed in ωX. The topology of ωX is generated by these closed classes.
Special cases
[edit]For normal spaces, the Wallman compactification is essentially the same as the Stone–Čech compactification.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- Aleksandrov, P.S. (2001) [1994], "Wallman_compactification", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press
- Wallman, Henry (1938), "Lattices and topological spaces", Annals of Mathematics, 39 (1): 112–126, doi:10.2307/1968717, JSTOR 1968717