Partially ordered topological space
In mathematics, a partially ordered space [ 1] (or pospace ) is a topological space
X
{\displaystyle X}
equipped with a closed partial order
≤
{\displaystyle \leq }
, i.e. a partial order whose graph
{
(
x
,
y
)
∈
X
2
∣
x
≤
y
}
{\displaystyle \{(x,y)\in X^{2}\mid x\leq y\}}
is a closed subset of
X
2
{\displaystyle X^{2}}
.
From pospaces, one can define dimaps , i.e. continuous maps between pospaces which preserve the order relation.
For a topological space
X
{\displaystyle X}
equipped with a partial order
≤
{\displaystyle \leq }
, the following are equivalent:
X
{\displaystyle X}
is a partially ordered space.
For all
x
,
y
∈
X
{\displaystyle x,y\in X}
with
x
≰
y
{\displaystyle x\not \leq y}
, there are open sets
U
,
V
⊂
X
{\displaystyle U,V\subset X}
with
x
∈
U
,
y
∈
V
{\displaystyle x\in U,y\in V}
and
u
≰
v
{\displaystyle u\not \leq v}
for all
u
∈
U
,
v
∈
V
{\displaystyle u\in U,v\in V}
.
For all
x
,
y
∈
X
{\displaystyle x,y\in X}
with
x
≰
y
{\displaystyle x\not \leq y}
, there are disjoint neighbourhoods
U
{\displaystyle U}
of
x
{\displaystyle x}
and
V
{\displaystyle V}
of
y
{\displaystyle y}
such that
U
{\displaystyle U}
is an upper set and
V
{\displaystyle V}
is a lower set.
The order topology is a special case of this definition, since a total order is also a partial order.
Every pospace is a Hausdorff space . If we take equality
=
{\displaystyle =}
as the partial order, this definition becomes the definition of a Hausdorff space.
Since the graph is closed, if
(
x
α
)
α
∈
A
{\displaystyle \left(x_{\alpha }\right)_{\alpha \in A}}
and
(
y
α
)
α
∈
A
{\displaystyle \left(y_{\alpha }\right)_{\alpha \in A}}
are nets converging to x and y , respectively, such that
x
α
≤
y
α
{\displaystyle x_{\alpha }\leq y_{\alpha }}
for all
α
{\displaystyle \alpha }
, then
x
≤
y
{\displaystyle x\leq y}
.
Basic concepts Types of orders/spaces Types of elements/subsets Topologies/Convergence Operators Main results
Key concepts Results Properties & Types (list ) Constructions Topology & OrdersRelated