Given a topological space $(X , \mathcal{O})$, along with the "topology"/"family of open sets" $\mathcal{O}$ one gets (implicitly) the family of closed sets $\mathcal{C}$. Then $\mathcal{O} \cup \mathcal{C}$ is a subset of the powerset $\mathcal{P}(X)$ of $X$, and we can then ask questions about the "closure" of $\mathcal{O} \cup \mathcal{C}$ under both finite intersections and finite unions, call it e.g. $\mathcal{W}$ or something.
So for example, given $C_n$ closed and $O_n$ open, $((C_1 \cap (C_2 \cup O_3)) \cup (O_4 \cap C_5)) \cap O_6 \in \mathcal{W}$.
Question: Does this family of subsets ("$\mathcal{W}$") have a name? Is it equal to either:
- the locally closed subsets of $X$?
- the $\boldsymbol{\Delta}_2^0$ subsets of $X$ in the Borel Hierarchy, i.e. those sets that are both $G_{\delta}$ and $F_{\sigma}$?
Comments: For $\boldsymbol{\Delta}_2^0$ subsets, I know we have to require $X$ to be Polish or something similar, because otherwise we're not guaranteed that open sets are $F_{\sigma}$ and closed sets are $G_{\delta}$. That being said, even in the Polish case my guess is that it is too broad of a class of subsets.
Because every locally closed set can be written as the intersection of one open set and one closed set, they seem like a possible candidate. However, this class of subsets might be too restrictive, because it is not clear to me whether they are closed under finite unions and intersections.
Motivation: Basically, e.g. in the case of $\mathbb{R}$, a family of subsets that includes all of $(a,b), [a,b], (a,b], [b,a)$ while still excluding $\mathbb{Q}$. I can explain the motivation further but it might be off-topic.
Related questions:
- Does the class of all finite unions of closed-open intervals on $\mathbb{R}$ form a ring sets?
- Finite intersections and unions of $F_{\sigma}$ and $G_{\delta}$ sets
- $[0,1)$ is in both $G_{\delta}$ and $F_{\sigma}$
- Finite unions and intersections $F_\sigma$ and $G_\delta$ sets
- Arbitrary Union and Intersection of Closed and Open Sets
- Why $[0,1)$, i.e. "closed/open" in defining Borel sigma algebra?
- Name for an intersection of open subset and closed subset
- the equivalency of two definitions of locally closed sets
- Are open or closed sets locally closed?
- The subset A is locally closed iff A is an intersection of an open and a closed set
- Locally closed subspace