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Paracompact space
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== Examples == * Every [[compact space]] is paracompact. * Every [[regular space|regular]] [[Lindelöf space]] is paracompact, by [[Michael's theorem on paracompact spaces|Michael's theorem]] in the Hausdorff case.<ref>It is not hard to give a direct proof that does not use Hausdorff.</ref> In particular, every [[locally compact]] [[Hausdorff space|Hausdorff]] [[second-countable space]] is paracompact. * The [[Sorgenfrey line]] is paracompact, even though it is neither compact, locally compact, second countable, nor metrizable. * Every [[CW complex]] is paracompact.<ref>[[Allen Hatcher|Hatcher, Allen]], ''Vector bundles and K-theory'', preliminary version available on the [http://pi.math.cornell.edu/~hatcher/ author's homepage]</ref> * ('''Theorem of [[A. H. Stone]]''') Every [[metric space]] is paracompact.<ref>Stone, A. H. [https://www.ams.org/journals/bull/1948-54-10/S0002-9904-1948-09118-2 Paracompactness and product spaces]. Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 54 (1948), 977–982</ref> Early proofs were somewhat involved, but an elementary one was found by [[Mary Ellen Rudin|M. E. Rudin]].<ref>{{cite journal | last1=Rudin | first1=Mary Ellen | authorlink1=Mary Ellen Rudin | title=A new proof that metric spaces are paracompact | journal=[[Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society]] | volume=20 | issue=2 | date=February 1969 | pages=603 | doi=10.1090/S0002-9939-1969-0236876-3 | doi-access=free}}</ref> Existing proofs of this require the [[axiom of choice]] for the non-[[separable space|separable]] case. It has been shown that [[Zermelo–Fraenkel set theory|ZF]] theory is not sufficient to prove it, even after the weaker [[axiom of dependent choice]] is added.<ref>{{cite journal | last1=Good | first1=C. | last2=Tree | first2=I. J. | last3=Watson | first3=W. S. | title=On Stone's theorem and the axiom of choice | journal=[[Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society]] | volume=126 | issue=4 | date=April 1998 | pages=1211–1218 | doi=10.1090/S0002-9939-98-04163-X | doi-access=free}}</ref> *A Hausdorff space admitting an [[exhaustion by compact sets]] is paracompact. Some examples of spaces that are not paracompact include: * The most famous counterexample is the [[long line (topology)|long line]], which is a nonparacompact [[topological manifold]]. (The long line is locally compact, but not second countable.) * Another counterexample is a [[product topology|product]] of [[uncountable set|uncountably]] many copies of an [[infinite (cardinality)|infinite]] [[discrete space]]. Any infinite set carrying the [[particular point topology]] is not paracompact; in fact it is not even [[metacompact]]. * The [[Prüfer manifold]] ''P'' is a non-paracompact surface. (It is easy to find an uncountable open cover of ''P'' with no refinement of any kind.) * The [[bagpipe theorem]] shows that there are 2<sup>ℵ<sub>1</sub></sup> topological [[Equivalence class|equivalence classes]] of non-paracompact surfaces. * The [[Sorgenfrey plane]] is not paracompact despite being a product of two paracompact spaces.
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