In topology, a coherent topology is a topology that is uniquely determined by a family of subspaces. Loosely speaking, a topological space is coherent with a family of subspaces if it is a topological union of those subspaces. It is also sometimes called the weak topology generated by the family of subspaces, a notion which is quite different from the notion of a weak topology generated by a set of maps.
Contents
Definition
Let X be a topological space and let C = {Cα : α ∈ A} be a family of subspaces of X (typically C will be a cover of X). Then X is said to be coherent with C (or determined by C) if X has the final topology coinduced by the inclusion maps
By definition, this is the finest topology on (the underlying set of) X for which the inclusion maps are continuous.
Equivalently, X is coherent with C if either of the following two equivalent conditions holds:
Given a topological space X and any family of subspaces C there is unique topology on (the underlying set of) X which is coherent with C. This topology will, in general, be finer than the given topology on X.
Examples
Topological union
Let
endowed with the final topology coinduced by the inclusion maps
Conversely, if X is coherent with a family of subspaces {Cα} that cover X, then X is homeomorphic to the topological union of the family {Cα}.
One can form the topological union of an arbitrary family of topological spaces as above, but if the topologies do not agree on the intersections then the inclusions will not necessarily be embeddings.
One can also describe the topological union by means of the disjoint union. Specifically, if X is a topological union of the family {Xα}, then X is homeomorphic to the quotient of the disjoint union of the family {Xα} by the equivalence relation
for all α, β in A. That is,
If the spaces {Xα} are all disjoint then the topological union is just the disjoint union.
Assume now that the set A is directed, in a way compatible with inclusion:
Properties
Let X be coherent with a family of subspaces {Cα}. A map f : X → Y is continuous if and only if the restrictions
are continuous for each α ∈ A. This universal property characterizes coherent topologies in the sense that a space X is coherent with C if and only if this property holds for all spaces Y and all functions f : X → Y.
Let X be determined by a cover C = {Cα}. Then
Let X be determined by {Cα} and let Y be an open or closed subspace of X. Then Y is determined by {Y ∩ Cα}.
Let X be determined by {Cα} and let f : X → Y be a quotient map. Then Y is determined by {f(Cα)}.
Let f : X → Y be a surjective map and suppose Y is determined by {Dα : α ∈ A}. For each α ∈ A let
be the restriction of f to f−1(Dα). Then