In mathematics, more specifically in general topology, the Tychonoff cube is the generalization of the unit cube from the product of a finite number of unit intervals to the product of an infinite, even uncountable number of unit intervals. The Tychonoff cube is named after Andrey Tychonoff, who first considered the arbitrary product of topological spaces and who proved in the 1930s that the Tychonoff cube is compact. Tychonoff later generalized this to the product of collections of arbitrary compact spaces. This result is now known as Tychonoff's theorem and is considered one of the most important results in general topology.[1]

Definition edit

Let   denote the unit interval  . Given a cardinal number  , we define a Tychonoff cube of weight   as the space   with the product topology, i.e. the product   where   is the cardinality of   and, for all  ,  .

The Hilbert cube,  , is a special case of a Tychonoff cube.

Properties edit

The axiom of choice is assumed throughout.

  • The Tychonoff cube is compact.
  • Given a cardinal number  , the space   is embeddable in  .
  • The Tychonoff cube   is a universal space for every compact space of weight  .
  • The Tychonoff cube   is a universal space for every Tychonoff space of weight  .
  • The character of   is  .

See also edit

References edit

  • Ryszard Engelking, General Topology, Heldermann Verlag, Sigma Series in Pure Mathematics, December 1989, ISBN 3885380064.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Willard, Stephen (2004), General Topology, Mineola, NY: Dover Publications, ISBN 0-486-43479-6