Noetherian topological space
A topological space X is called if it satisfies the descending chain condition
for closed subsets: for any sequence
Y1⊇Y2⊇⋯ |
of closed subsets Yi of X, there is an integer m such that Ym=Ym+1=⋯.
As a first example, note that all finite topological spaces are Noetherian.
There is a lot of interplay between the Noetherian condition and compactness:
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•
Every Noetherian topological space is quasi-compact.
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A Hausdorff topological space X is Noetherian if and only if every subspace
of X is compact
. (i.e. X is hereditarily compact)
Note that if R is a Noetherian ring, then Spec(R), the prime spectrum of R, is a Noetherian topological space.
Example of a Noetherian topological space:
The space 𝔸nk (affine n-space over a field k) under the Zariski topology is an example of a Noetherian topological space. By properties of the ideal of a subset of 𝔸nk, we know that if
Y1⊇Y2⊇⋯ is a descending chain of Zariski-closed subsets, then I(Y1)⊆I(Y2)⊆⋯ is an ascending chain of ideals of k[x1,…,xn].
Since k[x1,…,xn] is a Noetherian ring, there exists an integer m such that I(Ym)=I(Ym+1)=⋯. But because we have a one-to-one correspondence between radical ideals of k[x1,…,xn] and Zariski-closed sets in 𝔸nk, we have V(I(Yi))=Yi for all i. Hence Ym=Ym+1=⋯ as required.
Title | Noetherian topological space |
---|---|
Canonical name | NoetherianTopologicalSpace |
Date of creation | 2013-03-22 13:03:33 |
Last modified on | 2013-03-22 13:03:33 |
Owner | mathcam (2727) |
Last modified by | mathcam (2727) |
Numerical id | 18 |
Author | mathcam (2727) |
Entry type | Definition |
Classification | msc 14A10 |
Related topic | Compact |