AbstractThe κ-productivity of classes C of topological spaces closed under quotients and disjoint sums is characterized by means of Cantor spaces. The smallest infinite cardinals κ such that such classes are not κ-productive are submeasurable cardinals. It follows that if a class of topological spaces is closed under quotients, disjoint sums and countable products, it is closed under products of non-sequentially many spaces (thus under all products, if sequential cardinals do not exist)
AbstractThe category of finitely-generated spaces is shown to be the largest hereditary cartesian cl...
AbstractFor an index set I, let S(I) be the sequential fan with I spines, i.e., the topological sum ...
AbstractA class C of topological spaces is said to be almost countably productive if ∏ni = 1 Xi ϵ C ...
AbstractThe κ-productivity of classes C of topological spaces closed under quotients and disjoint su...
summary:Every nontrivial countably productive coreflective subcategory of topological linear spaces ...
AbstractAs applications of productivity of coreflective classes of topological spaces, the following...
AbstractThe Mackey theorem on products of bornological spaces is generalized to classes of topologic...
To George Strecker — inspiring mathematician and wonderful friend. Abstract. Every nontrivial counta...
AbstractUsing the fact that each product of uniform quotient mappings is a quotient mapping, new con...
AbstractThe category of finitely-generated spaces is shown to be the largest finitely productive car...
AbstractSubmeasurable cardinals are defined in a similar way as measurable cardinals are. Their char...
AbstractGood ultrafilters produce topological ultraproducts which enjoy a strong Baire category prop...
. Submeasurable cardinals are defined in a similar way as measurable cardinals are. Their characteri...
AbstractWe show that if X is an uncountable productive γ-set [F. Jordan, Productive local properties...
summary:Let $\kappa $ be a cardinal number with the usual order topology. We prove that all subspace...
AbstractThe category of finitely-generated spaces is shown to be the largest hereditary cartesian cl...
AbstractFor an index set I, let S(I) be the sequential fan with I spines, i.e., the topological sum ...
AbstractA class C of topological spaces is said to be almost countably productive if ∏ni = 1 Xi ϵ C ...
AbstractThe κ-productivity of classes C of topological spaces closed under quotients and disjoint su...
summary:Every nontrivial countably productive coreflective subcategory of topological linear spaces ...
AbstractAs applications of productivity of coreflective classes of topological spaces, the following...
AbstractThe Mackey theorem on products of bornological spaces is generalized to classes of topologic...
To George Strecker — inspiring mathematician and wonderful friend. Abstract. Every nontrivial counta...
AbstractUsing the fact that each product of uniform quotient mappings is a quotient mapping, new con...
AbstractThe category of finitely-generated spaces is shown to be the largest finitely productive car...
AbstractSubmeasurable cardinals are defined in a similar way as measurable cardinals are. Their char...
AbstractGood ultrafilters produce topological ultraproducts which enjoy a strong Baire category prop...
. Submeasurable cardinals are defined in a similar way as measurable cardinals are. Their characteri...
AbstractWe show that if X is an uncountable productive γ-set [F. Jordan, Productive local properties...
summary:Let $\kappa $ be a cardinal number with the usual order topology. We prove that all subspace...
AbstractThe category of finitely-generated spaces is shown to be the largest hereditary cartesian cl...
AbstractFor an index set I, let S(I) be the sequential fan with I spines, i.e., the topological sum ...
AbstractA class C of topological spaces is said to be almost countably productive if ∏ni = 1 Xi ϵ C ...