A
topological space X is
reducible if it can be written as a union X = X_1 \cup X_2 of two
closed proper subsets X_1, X_2 of X. A topological space is
irreducible (or
hyperconnected) if it is not reducible. Equivalently,
X is irreducible if all non empty
open subsets of
X are
dense, or if any two nonempty open sets have nonempty
intersection. A subset
F of a topological space
X is called irreducible or reducible, if
F considered as a topological space via the
subspace topology has the corresponding property in the above sense. That is, F is reducible if it can be written as a union F = (G_1\cap F)\cup(G_2\cap F), where G_1,G_2 are closed subsets of X, neither of which contains F. An
irreducible component of a topological space is a
maximal irreducible subset. If a subset is irreducible, its
closure is also irreducible, so irreducible components are closed. Every irreducible subset of a space
X is contained in a (not necessarily unique) irreducible component of
X. Every point x\in X is contained in some irreducible component of
X.
The empty topological space The empty topological space vacuously satisfies the definition above for
irreducible (since it has no proper subsets). However some authors, especially those interested in applications to
algebraic topology, explicitly exclude the empty set from being irreducible. This article will not follow that convention. == In algebraic geometry ==