These definitions all use essentially the
preliminary definitions above. Many of these names have
alternative meanings in some of mathematical literature; for example, the meanings of "normal" and "T4" are sometimes interchanged, similarly "regular" and "T3", etc. Many of the concepts also have several names; however, the one listed first is always least likely to be ambiguous. Most of these axioms have alternative definitions with the same meaning; the definitions given here fall into a consistent pattern that relates the various notions of separation defined in the previous section. Other possible definitions can be found in the individual articles. In all of the following definitions,
X is again a
topological space. •
X is
T0, or
Kolmogorov, if any two distinct points in
X are
topologically distinguishable. (It will be a common theme among the separation axioms to have one version of an axiom that requires T0 and one version that doesn't.) •
X is
R0, or
symmetric, if any two topologically distinguishable points in
X are separated. •
X is
T1, or
accessible or
Fréchet, if any two distinct points in
X are separated. Equivalently, every single-point set is a closed set. Thus,
X is T1 if and only if it is both T0 and R0. (Although one may say such things as "T1 space", "Fréchet topology", and "suppose that the topological space
X is Fréchet"; one should avoid saying "Fréchet space" in this context, since there is another entirely different notion of
Fréchet space in
functional analysis.) •
X is
R1, or
preregular, if any two topologically distinguishable points in
X are separated by neighbourhoods. Every R1 space is also R0. •
X is
Hausdorff, or
T2 or
separated, if any two distinct points in
X are separated by neighbourhoods. Thus,
X is Hausdorff if and only if it is both T0 and R1. Every Hausdorff space is also T1. •
X is
T2½, or
Urysohn, if any two distinct points in
X are separated by closed neighbourhoods. Every T2½ space is also Hausdorff. •
X is
completely Hausdorff, or
completely T2, if any two distinct points in
X are separated by a continuous function. Every completely Hausdorff space is also T2½. •
X is
regular if, given any point
x and closed set
F in
X such that
x does not belong to
F, they are separated by neighbourhoods. (In fact, in a regular space, any such
x and
F will also be separated by closed neighbourhoods.) Every regular space is also R1. •
X is
regular Hausdorff, or
T3, if it is both T0 and regular. Every regular Hausdorff space is also T2½. •
X is
completely regular if, given any point
x and closed set
F in
X such that
x does not belong to
F, they are separated by a continuous function. Every completely regular space is also regular. •
X is
Tychonoff, or
T3½,
completely T3, or
completely regular Hausdorff, if it is both T0 and completely regular. Every Tychonoff space is both regular Hausdorff and completely Hausdorff. •
X is
normal if any two disjoint closed subsets of
X are separated by neighbourhoods. (In fact, a space is normal if and only if any two disjoint closed sets can be separated by a continuous function; this is
Urysohn's lemma.) •
X is
normal regular if it is both R0 and normal. Every normal regular space is also completely regular. •
X is
normal Hausdorff, or
T4, if it is both T1 and normal. Every normal Hausdorff space is also both Tychonoff and normal regular. •
X is
completely normal if any two separated sets are separated by neighbourhoods. Every completely normal space is also normal. •
X is
completely normal Hausdorff, or
T5 or
completely T4, if it is both completely normal and T1. Every completely normal Hausdorff space is also normal Hausdorff. •
X is
perfectly normal if any two disjoint closed sets are precisely separated by a continuous function. Every perfectly normal space is also both completely normal and completely regular. •
X is
perfectly normal Hausdorff, or
T6 or
perfectly T4, if it is both perfectly normal and T0. Every perfectly normal Hausdorff space is also completely normal Hausdorff. The following table summarizes the separation axioms as well as the implications between them: cells which are merged represent equivalent properties, each axiom implies the ones in the cells to its left, and if we assume the T1 axiom, then each axiom also implies the ones in the cells above it (for example, all normal T1 spaces are also completely regular). ==Relationships between the axioms==