The
cofinite topology or the
finite complement topology is a
topology that can be defined on every set X. It has precisely the
empty set and all cofinite subsets of X as open sets. As a consequence, in the cofinite topology, the only closed subsets are finite sets, or the whole of X. For this reason, the cofinite topology is also known as the
finite-closed topology. Symbolically, one writes the topology as \mathcal{T} = \{A \subseteq X : A = \varnothing \mbox{ or } X \setminus A \mbox{ is finite} \}. This topology occurs naturally in the context of the
Zariski topology. Since
polynomials in one variable over a
field K are zero on finite sets, or the whole of K, the Zariski topology on K (considered as
affine line) is the cofinite topology. The same is true for any
irreducible algebraic curve; it is not true, for example, for XY = 0 in the plane.
Properties • Subspaces: Every
subspace topology of the cofinite topology is also a cofinite topology. • Compactness: Since every
open set contains all but finitely many points of X, the space X is
compact and
sequentially compact. • Separation: The cofinite topology is the
coarsest topology satisfying the
T1 axiom; that is, it is the smallest topology for which every
singleton set is closed. In fact, an arbitrary topology on X satisfies the T1 axiom if and only if it contains the cofinite topology. If X is finite then the cofinite topology is simply the
discrete topology. If X is not finite then this topology is not
Hausdorff (T2),
regular or
normal because no two nonempty open sets are disjoint (that is, it is
hyperconnected).
Double-pointed cofinite topology The
double-pointed cofinite topology is the cofinite topology with every point doubled; that is, it is the
topological product of the cofinite topology with the
indiscrete topology on a two-element set. It is not
T0 or
T1, since the points of each doublet are
topologically indistinguishable. It is, however,
R0 since topologically distinguishable points are
separated. The space is
compact as the product of two compact spaces; alternatively, it is compact because each nonempty open set contains all but finitely many points. For an example of the countable double-pointed cofinite topology, the set \Z of integers can be given a topology such that every
even number 2n is
topologically indistinguishable from the following
odd number 2n+1. The closed sets are the unions of finitely many pairs 2n,2n+1, or the whole set. The open sets are the complements of the closed sets; namely, each open set consists of all but a finite number of pairs 2n,2n+1, or is the empty set. ==Other examples==