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Friday, April 24, 2026

Equivalent definition of Hausdorff space via Hom and its applications

Equivalent definition of Hausdorff space

Definition. Let X be a topological space. Let f:YZ be a continuous function such that f(Y)=Z (i.e., f is a dense map).
Then X is Hausdorff if the induced map Top(f,X):Top(Z,X)Top(Y,X) is injective.

Theorem. The above definition is equivalent to the standard definition of a Hausdorff space.

Proof (). Let X be a Hausdorff space, and let g,h:ZX be two continuous functions such that gf=hf.
Since X is Hausdorff, the equalizer Eq(h,g)={zZh(z)=g(z)}=(h,g)1(Δ) is a closed subset of Z. Since g and h agree on f(Y), we have f(Y)Eq(h,g). Given that f(Y)=Z and the equalizer is closed, it follows that Eq(h,g)=Z. Hence, h=g, proving Top(f,X) is injective.

Proof (). Let X be a space such that Top(,X) satisfies the injectivity property for all dense maps. Assume for contradiction that the diagonal ΔX2 is not closed.
Consider the dense embedding j:ΔΔ. By our assumption, the induced map j:Top(Δ,X)Top(Δ,X) is injective.
Now consider the two projections π1,π2:ΔX. We know that π1π2 because there exists some point (a,b)ΔΔ where ab. However, on the diagonal itself, π1j=π2j. This contradicts the injectivity of j. Thus, Δ must be closed, and X is Hausdorff.

Connectedness

Definition. Let 2:={0,1} be the discrete two-point space (the coproduct 11 in Top). A topological space X is connected if |Top(X,2)|2.

Corollary. Let UY be a connected subspace. Then for any Z such that UZU, Z is connected as well.

Proof. The inclusion map i:UZ has a dense image in Z. Since the discrete space 2 is Hausdorff, the induced map Top(Z,2)Top(U,2) is injective.
Therefore, |Top(Z,2)||Top(U,2)|2. Thus, Z is connected.

Unique Limits

Definition. Let N be the set of natural numbers with the discrete topology, and let N=N{} be its one-point compactification.
Let i:NN be the natural inclusion map. For any topological space X:
Sequences in X have unique limits if and only if Top(i,X):Top(N,X)Top(N,X) is injective.

Corollary. Every Hausdorff space has unique limits for sequences.

Proof. The inclusion i:NN is a dense map. Since X is Hausdorff, the map Top(i,X) is injective by our first theorem. Thus, any sequence (represented by a map from N) has at most one continuous extension to N (the limit).

 

 

 

 

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