Axiom of countability

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In mathematics, an axiom of countability is a property of certain mathematical objects that asserts the existence of a countable set with certain properties. Without such an axiom, such a set might not provably exist.

Important examples

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Important countability axioms for topological spaces include:[1]

Relationships with each other

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These axioms are related to each other in the following ways:

  • Every first-countable space is sequential.
  • Every second-countable space is first countable, separable, and Lindelöf.
  • Every σ-compact space is Lindelöf.
  • Every metric space is first countable.
  • For metric spaces, second-countability, separability, and the Lindelöf property are all equivalent.
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Other examples of mathematical objects obeying axioms of countability include sigma-finite measure spaces, and lattices of countable type.

References

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  1. ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value)..