Tychonoff space
| Separation axioms in topological spaces | |
|---|---|
| Kolmogorov classification | |
| T0 | (Kolmogorov) | 
| T1 | (Fréchet) | 
| T2 | (Hausdorff) | 
| T2½ | (Urysohn) | 
| completely T2 | (completely Hausdorff) | 
| T3 | (regular Hausdorff) | 
| T3½ | (Tychonoff) | 
| T4 | (normal Hausdorff) | 
| T5 | (completely normal Hausdorff) | 
| T6 | (perfectly normal Hausdorff) | 
In topology and related branches of mathematics, Tychonoff spaces and completely regular spaces are kinds of topological spaces. These conditions are examples of separation axioms. A Tychonoff space is any completely regular space that is also a Hausdorff space; there exist completely regular spaces that are not Tychonoff (i.e. not Hausdorff).
Paul Urysohn had used the notion of completely regular space in a 1925 paper without giving it a name. But it was Andrey Tychonoff who introduced the terminology completely regular in 1930.