Is the collection \(\displaystyle \mathcal{T}\) closed under arbitrary union?Hi, can someone please help me to understand why this is not a topological space?
Let X = R and let T = {empty set} U {R} U {[a , infinity): a is in R } Why is (X; T ) not a topological space?
What does it mean to say \(\displaystyle \mathcal{T}\) is a topology on \(\displaystyle \mathcal{X}~?\)its not closed. So T has to be closed under arbitrary union in order to be a topological space?
What is \(\displaystyle \bigcup\limits_{n \in {\mathbb{Z}^ + }} {\left[ {\frac{1}{n},\infty } \right)} =~? \)Whoah just curious, how is T not closed under arbitrary union? I tried picking some arbitrary sets like [5, infinity), [6, infinity) and their union seems to be in T. What am I doing wrong?
Ok, so is the Sorgenfrey topology not a topology since it generates something not given in the set?
Maybe I'm completely off track, but it looks like the Sorgenfrey topology to me, because it looks to me like the union (look at the original problem, lots of union symbols) of sets of the form [a, b), but in this case b happens to be infinity. Maybe I am looking at it wrong, and I must be, because otherwise there's a contradiction somewhere. So what am I doing wrong here?
.it looks like the Sorgenfrey topology to me, because it looks to me like the union (look at the original problem, lots of union symbols) of sets of the form [a, b), but in this case b happens to be infinity. Maybe I am looking at it wrong, and I must be, because otherwise there's a contradiction somewhere. So what am I doing wrong
You could have looked this up for yourself.Ok, so what does it mean to generate a topology? How does a collection of sets which is not a topology suddenly generate a topology?