MathNugget
Junior Member
- Joined
- Feb 1, 2024
- Messages
- 195
I know that a space is Hausdorff if for every 2 different points, there's 2 disjoint open sets, each containing one of the points. Also, the [imath]\mathbb{P}^2[/imath] can be seen as [imath]\mathbb{R}^2[/imath] with a line at infinity, or as [imath]\mathbb{R}^3\backslash \{0\}/\sim[/imath], with [imath]P\sim Q \Leftrightarrow OP=OQ[/imath].
I have trouble defining the open sets of [imath]\mathbb{P}^2[/imath]. I am mostly looking at the first definition of the projective plane, as [imath]\mathbb{R}^2[/imath] is Hausdorff already. But how would I prove for 2 points at infinity, or 1 basic point and 1 at infinity?
I have trouble defining the open sets of [imath]\mathbb{P}^2[/imath]. I am mostly looking at the first definition of the projective plane, as [imath]\mathbb{R}^2[/imath] is Hausdorff already. But how would I prove for 2 points at infinity, or 1 basic point and 1 at infinity?