Examples[edit]

The finest topology on X is the discrete topology; this topology makes all subsets open. The coarsest topology on X is the trivial topology; this topology only admits the empty set and the whole space as open sets.


In function spaces and spaces of measures there are often a number of possible topologies. See topologies on the set of operators on a Hilbert space for some intricate relationships.


All possible polar topologies on a dual pair are finer than the weak topology and coarser than the strong topology.


The complex vector space Cn may be equipped with either its usual (Euclidean) topology, or its Zariski topology. In the latter, a subset V of Cn is closed if and only if it consists of all solutions to some system of polynomial equations. Since any such V also is a closed set in the ordinary sense, but not vice versa, the Zariski topology is strictly weaker than the ordinary one.

τ1τ2

the idX : (X, τ2) → (X, τ1) is a continuous map.

identity map

the identity map idX : (X, τ1) → (X, τ2) is a .

strongly/relatively open map

Let τ1 and τ2 be two topologies on a set X. Then the following statements are equivalent:


(The identity map idX is surjective and therefore it is strongly open if and only if it is relatively open.)


Two immediate corollaries of the above equivalent statements are


One can also compare topologies using neighborhood bases. Let τ1 and τ2 be two topologies on a set X and let Bi(x) be a local base for the topology τi at xX for i = 1,2. Then τ1τ2 if and only if for all xX, each open set U1 in B1(x) contains some open set U2 in B2(x). Intuitively, this makes sense: a finer topology should have smaller neighborhoods.

Lattice of topologies[edit]

The set of all topologies on a set X together with the partial ordering relation ⊆ forms a complete lattice that is also closed under arbitrary intersections.[2] That is, any collection of topologies on X have a meet (or infimum) and a join (or supremum). The meet of a collection of topologies is the intersection of those topologies. The join, however, is not generally the union of those topologies (the union of two topologies need not be a topology) but rather the topology generated by the union.


Every complete lattice is also a bounded lattice, which is to say that it has a greatest and least element. In the case of topologies, the greatest element is the discrete topology and the least element is the trivial topology.


The lattice of topologies on a set is a complemented lattice; that is, given a topology on there exists a topology on such that the intersection is the trivial topology and the topology generated by the union is the discrete topology.[3][4]


If the set has at least three elements, the lattice of topologies on is not modular,[5] and hence not distributive either.

the coarsest topology on a set to make a family of mappings from that set continuous

Initial topology

the finest topology on a set to make a family of mappings into that set continuous

Final topology