Separable space

In topology and related areas of mathematics a topological space is called separable if it contains a countable dense subset; that is, a set with a countable number of elements whose closure is the entire space. This condition is typical of spaces that are met in classical parts of mathematical analysis and geometry. In the same way that any real number can be approximated to any specified accuracy by rational numbers, a separable space has some countable subset with which all its elements can be approached, in the sense of a mathematical limit.

Separable spaces are topological spaces with a certain limitation on their size. The separability property is often listed as one of the axioms of countability. From an axiomatic point of view separability was rather frowned upon in the period 1940 to 1960 — where previously it had been basic to descriptive set theory. Subsequently the pendulum swung back, and textbooks would more often choose to admit separability, proving less general theorems (this attitude was adopted, for example, by Jean Dieudonné). For example taking Hilbert space to mean a complex Hilbert space of infinite dimension and separable, there is one such space up to isomorphism (there is a categorical theory, at least if our theory of the real numbers is categorical). This is a useful convention for discussion, at least. The possible use of non-separable Hilbert spaces in theoretical physics has provoked some inconclusive debate.

Separability is especially important in numerical analysis and constructive mathematics, since many theorems that can be proved for nonseparable spaces have constructive proofs only for separable spaces. Such constructive proofs can be turned into algorithms for use in numerical analysis, and they are the only sorts of proofs acceptable in constructive analysis. A famous example of a theorem of this sort is the Hahn-Banach theorem.

Examples

Properties

See also: Separable space, Algorithm, Axioms of countability, Beth-two, Cardinality, Cardinality of the real numbers, Closure (topology), Continuous (topology), Continuous function, Countable set