Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4659890 Topology and its Applications 2010 18 Pages PDF
Abstract

The recent literature offers examples, specific and hand-crafted, of Tychonoff spaces (in ZFC) which respond negatively to these questions, due respectively to Ceder and Pearson (1967) [3], and to Comfort and García-Ferreira (2001) [5]: (1) Is every ω-resolvable space maximally resolvable? (2) Is every maximally resolvable space extraresolvable? Now using the method of KID expansion, the authors show that every suitably restricted Tychonoff topological space (X,T) admits a larger Tychonoff topology (that is, an “expansion”) witnessing such failure. Specifically the authors show in ZFC that if (X,T) is a maximally resolvable Tychonoff space with S(X,T)⩽Δ(X,T)=κ, then (X,T) has Tychonoff expansions U=Ui (1⩽i⩽5), with Δ(X,Ui)=Δ(X,T) and S(X,Ui)⩽Δ(X,Ui), such that (X,Ui) is: (i=1) ω-resolvable but not maximally resolvable; (i=2) [if κ′ is regular, with S(X,T)⩽κ′⩽κ] τ-resolvable for all τ<κ′, but not κ′-resolvable; (i=3) maximally resolvable, but not extraresolvable; (i=4) extraresolvable, but not maximally resolvable; (i=5) maximally resolvable and extraresolvable, but not strongly extraresolvable.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Mathematics Geometry and Topology