Every locally compact
preregular space is, in fact,
completely regular. It follows that every locally compact Hausdorff space is a
Tychonoff space. Since straight regularity is a more familiar condition than either preregularity (which is usually weaker) or complete regularity (which is usually stronger), locally compact preregular spaces are normally referred to in the mathematical literature as
locally compact regular spaces. Similarly locally compact Tychonoff spaces are usually just referred to as
locally compact Hausdorff spaces. Every locally compact regular space, in particular every locally compact Hausdorff space, is a
Baire space. That is, the conclusion of the
Baire category theorem holds: the
interior of every
countable union of
nowhere dense subsets is empty. A
subspace X of a locally compact Hausdorff space
Y is locally compact if and only if
X is
locally closed in
Y (that is,
X can be written as the
set-theoretic difference of two closed subsets of
Y). In particular, every closed set and every open set in a locally compact Hausdorff space is locally compact. Also, as a corollary, a
dense subspace
X of a locally compact Hausdorff space
Y is locally compact if and only if
X is open in
Y. Furthermore, if a subspace
X of
any Hausdorff space
Y is locally compact, then
X still must be locally closed in
Y, although the
converse does not hold in general. Without the Hausdorff hypothesis, some of these results break down with weaker notions of locally compact. Every closed set in a
weakly locally compact space (= condition (1) in the definitions above) is weakly locally compact. But not every open set in a weakly locally compact space is weakly locally compact. For example, the
one-point compactification \Q^* of the rational numbers \Q is compact, and hence weakly locally compact. But it contains \Q as an open set which is not weakly locally compact.
Quotient spaces of locally compact Hausdorff spaces are
compactly generated. Conversely, every compactly generated Hausdorff space is a quotient of some locally compact Hausdorff space. For functions defined on a locally compact space,
local uniform convergence is the same as
compact convergence.
The point at infinity This section explores
compactifications of locally compact spaces. Every compact space is its own compactification. So to avoid trivialities it is assumed below that the space
X is not compact. Since every locally compact Hausdorff space
X is Tychonoff, it can be
embedded in a compact Hausdorff space b(X) using the
Stone–Čech compactification. But in fact, there is a simpler method available in the locally compact case; the
one-point compactification will embed
X in a compact Hausdorff space a(X) with just one extra point. (The one-point compactification can be applied to other spaces, but a(X) will be Hausdorff if and only if
X is locally compact and Hausdorff.) The locally compact Hausdorff spaces can thus be characterised as the open subsets of compact Hausdorff spaces. Intuitively, the extra point in a(X) can be thought of as a
point at infinity. The point at infinity should be thought of as lying outside every compact subset of
X. Many intuitive notions about tendency towards infinity can be formulated in locally compact Hausdorff spaces using this idea. For example, a
continuous real or
complex valued
function f with
domain X is said to
vanish at infinity if, given any
positive number e, there is a compact subset
K of
X such that |f(x)| whenever the
point x lies outside of
K. This definition makes sense for any topological space
X. If
X is locally compact and Hausdorff, such functions are precisely those extendable to a continuous function
g on its one-point compactification a(X) = X \cup \{ \infty \} where g(\infty) = 0.
Gelfand representation For a locally compact Hausdorff space
X, the set C_0(X) of all continuous complex-valued functions on
X that vanish at infinity is a commutative
C*-algebra. In fact, every commutative C*-algebra is
isomorphic to C_0(X) for some
unique (
up to homeomorphism) locally compact Hausdorff space
X. This is shown using the
Gelfand representation.
Locally compact groups The notion of local compactness is important in the study of
topological groups mainly because every Hausdorff
locally compact group G carries natural
measures called the
Haar measures which allow one to
integrate measurable functions defined on
G. The
Lebesgue measure on the
real line \R is a special case of this. The
Pontryagin dual of a
topological abelian group A is locally compact
if and only if A is locally compact. More precisely, Pontryagin duality defines a self-
duality of the
category of locally compact abelian groups. The study of locally compact abelian groups is the foundation of
harmonic analysis, a field that has since spread to non-abelian locally compact groups. == See also ==