One of the first widely recognized metrization theorems was ''
. This states that every Hausdorff second-countable regular space is metrizable. So, for example, every second-countable manifold is metrizable. (Historical note: The form of the theorem shown here was in fact proved by Tikhonov in 1926. What Urysohn had shown, in a paper published posthumously in 1925, was that every second-countable normal'' Hausdorff space is metrizable.) The converse does not hold: there exist metric spaces that are not second countable, for example, an uncountable set endowed with the discrete metric. The
Nagata–Smirnov metrization theorem, described below, provides a more specific theorem where the converse does hold. Several other metrization theorems follow as simple corollaries to Urysohn's theorem. For example, a
compact Hausdorff space is metrizable if and only if it is second-countable. Urysohn's Theorem can be restated as: A topological space is
separable and metrizable if and only if it is regular, Hausdorff and second-countable. The Nagata–Smirnov metrization theorem extends this to the non-separable case. It states that a topological space is metrizable
if and only if it is regular, Hausdorff and has a σ-locally finite base. A σ-locally finite base is a base which is a union of countably many
locally finite collections of open sets. For a closely related theorem see the
Bing metrization theorem. Separable metrizable spaces can also be characterized as those spaces which are
homeomorphic to a subspace of the
Hilbert cube \lbrack 0, 1 \rbrack ^\N, that is, the countably infinite product of the unit interval (with its natural subspace topology from the reals) with itself, endowed with the
product topology. A space is said to be
locally metrizable if every point has a metrizable
neighbourhood. Smirnov proved that a locally metrizable space is metrizable if and only if it is Hausdorff and
paracompact. In particular, a manifold is metrizable if and only if it is paracompact. ==Examples==