A topological space is van der Waerden if for every sequence in there exists a converging subsequence so that contains arbitrarily long finite arithmetic progressions. Not every sequentially compact space is van der Waerden. The product of two van der Waerden spaces is van der Waerden. The following condition on a Hausdorff space is sufficent for to be van der Waerden: -
- The closure of every countable set in is compact and first-countable.
A Hausdorff space that satisfies satisfies, in fact, a stronger property: for every sequence in : -
- There exists so that is converging, and contains arbitrarily long finite arithmetic progressions and sets of the form for arbitrarily large finite sets .
There are nonmetrizable and noncompact spaces which satisfy . In particular, every sequence of ordinal numbers and every bounded sequence of real monotone functions on satisfy . |