Mathematical Research Data Initiative
Main page
Recent changes
Random page
Help about MediaWiki
Create a new Item
Create a new Property
Merge two items
In other projects
Discussion
View source
View history
Purge
English
Log in

On the dimension of remainders of extensions of normal spaces

From MaRDI portal
Publication:910756
Jump to:navigation, search

DOI10.1016/0166-8641(90)90002-JzbMath0696.54025OpenAlexW1996064281MaRDI QIDQ910756

N. E. Zubov

Publication date: 1990

Published in: Topology and its Applications (Search for Journal in Brave)

Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/0166-8641(90)90002-j


zbMATH Keywords

extensionStone-Čech compactificationStone-Čech remainderstrongly metrizable spacealmost n- dimensional spacesalmost weakly infinite-dimensional spacesexistence of residual setsL-paracompact spacenumber of compactificationsremainder of given dimensionsufficient number of compactifications


Mathematics Subject Classification ID

Dimension theory in general topology (54F45) Remainders in general topology (54D40) Extension of maps (54C20)





Cites Work

  • Some properties of compactifications
  • The Baire-category method in some compact extension problems
  • On compactifications of metric spaces with transfinite dimensions
  • Normal families and dimension theory for metric spaces
  • Stone-Cech Compactifications of Products
  • INFINITE-DIMENSIONAL COMPACT HAUSDORFF SPACES
  • Some questions in the theory of bicompactifications
  • Unnamed Item
  • Unnamed Item
  • Unnamed Item
  • Unnamed Item
  • Unnamed Item
  • Unnamed Item
  • Unnamed Item




This page was built for publication: On the dimension of remainders of extensions of normal spaces

Retrieved from "https://portal.mardi4nfdi.de/w/index.php?title=Publication:910756&oldid=12870570"
Tools
What links here
Related changes
Special pages
Printable version
Permanent link
Page information
MaRDI portal item
This page was last edited on 30 January 2024, at 16:51.
Privacy policy
About MaRDI portal
Disclaimers
Imprint
Powered by MediaWiki