The following is a list of named topologies or topological spaces, many of which are counterexamples in topology and related branches of mathematics. This is not a list of properties that a topology or topological space might possess; for that, see List of general topology topics and Topological property.
Discrete and indiscrete
Cardinality and ordinals
Finite spaces
Integers
Fractals and Cantor set
Orders
Manifolds and complexes
Hyperbolic geometry
Paradoxical spaces
- Lakes of Wada â Three disjoint connected open sets of or that all have the same boundary.
Unique
Related or similar to manifolds
Embeddings and maps between spaces
Counter-examples (general topology)
The following topologies are a known source of counterexamples for point-set topology.
- Alexandroff plank
- Appert topology â A Hausdorff, perfectly normal (T<sub>6</sub>), zero-dimensional space that is countable, but neither first countable, locally compact, nor countably compact.
- Arens square
- Bullet-riddled square - The space where is the set of bullets. Neither of these sets is Jordan measurable although both are Lebesgue measurable.
- Cantor tree
- Comb space
- Dieudonné plank
- Double origin topology
- Dunce hat (topology)
- EitherâÂÂor topology
- Excluded point topology â A topological space where the open sets are defined in terms of the exclusion of a particular point.
- Fort space
- Half-disk topology
- Hilbert cube â with the product topology.
- Infinite broom
- Integer broom topology
- K-topology
- KnasterâÂÂKuratowski fan
- Long line (topology)
- Moore plane, also called the ' â A first countable, separable, completely regular, Hausdorff, Moore space that is not normal, Lindelöf, metrizable, second countable, nor locally compact. It also an uncountable closed subspace with the discrete topology.
- Nested interval topology
- Overlapping interval topology â Second countable space that is T<sub>0</sub> but not T<sub>1</sub>.
- Particular point topology â Assuming the set is infinite, then contains a non-closed compact subset whose closure is not compact and moreover, it is neither metacompact nor paracompact.
- Rational sequence topology
- Sorgenfrey line, which is endowed with lower limit topology â It is Hausdorff, perfectly normal, first-countable, separable, paracompact, Lindelöf, Baire, and a Moore space but not metrizable, second-countable, ÃÂ-compact, nor locally compact.
- Sorgenfrey plane, which is the product of two copies of the Sorgenfrey line â A Moore space that is neither normal, paracompact, nor second countable.
- Topologist's sine curve
- Tychonoff plank
- Vague topology
- Warsaw circle
Topologies defined in terms of other topologies
Natural topologies
List of natural topologies.
Compactifications
Compactifications include:
Topologies of uniform convergence
This lists named topologies of uniform convergence.
Other induced topologies
Functional analysis
Operator topologies
Tensor products
Probability
Other topologies
See also
Citations
References
External links