Harman Patil (Editor)

Trivial topology

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In topology, a topological space with the trivial topology is one where the only open sets are the empty set and the entire space. Such a space is sometimes called an indiscrete space. Intuitively, this has the consequence that all points of the space are "lumped together" and cannot be distinguished by topological means; it belongs to a pseudometric space in which the distance between any two points is zero.

The trivial topology is the topology with the least possible number of open sets, since the definition of a topology requires these two sets to be open. Despite its simplicity, a space X with more than one element and the trivial topology lacks a key desirable property: it is not a T0 space.

Other properties of an indiscrete space X—many of which are quite unusual—include:

  • The only closed sets are the empty set and X.
  • The only possible basis of X is {X}.
  • If X has more than one point, then since it is not T0, it does not satisfy any of the higher T axioms either. In particular, it is not a Hausdorff space. Not being Hausdorff, X is not an order topology, nor is it metrizable.
  • X is, however, regular, completely regular, normal, and completely normal; all in a rather vacuous way though, since the only closed sets are ∅ and X.
  • X is compact and therefore paracompact, Lindelöf, and locally compact.
  • Every function whose domain is a topological space and codomain X is continuous.
  • X is path-connected and so connected.
  • X is second-countable, and therefore is first-countable, separable and Lindelöf.
  • All subspaces of X have the trivial topology.
  • All quotient spaces of X have the trivial topology
  • Arbitrary products of trivial topological spaces, with either the product topology or box topology, have the trivial topology.
  • All sequences in X converge to every point of X. In particular, every sequence has a convergent subsequence (the whole sequence), thus X is sequentially compact.
  • The interior of every set except X is empty.
  • The closure of every non-empty subset of X is X. Put another way: every non-empty subset of X is dense, a property that characterizes trivial topological spaces.
  • As a result of this, the closure of every open subset U of X is either ∅ (if U = ∅) or X (otherwise). In particular, the closure of every open subset of X is again an open set, and therefore X is extremally disconnected.
  • If S is any subset of X with more than one element, then all elements of X are limit points of S. If S is a singleton, then every point of X \ S is still a limit point of S.
  • X is a Baire space.
  • Two topological spaces carrying the trivial topology are homeomorphic iff they have the same cardinality.
  • In some sense the opposite of the trivial topology is the discrete topology, in which every subset is open.

    The trivial topology belongs to a uniform space in which the whole cartesian product X × X is the only entourage.

    Let Top be the category of topological spaces with continuous maps and Set be the category of sets with functions. If F : TopSet is the functor that assigns to each topological space its underlying set (the so-called forgetful functor), and G : SetTop is the functor that puts the trivial topology on a given set, then G is right adjoint to F. (The functor H : SetTop that puts the discrete topology on a given set is left adjoint to F.)

    References

    Trivial topology Wikipedia


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