ForMyThunder
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Here is theorem 9.2 from Stephen Willard's General Topology:
If X and Y are topological spaces and f:X\to Y is continuous and either open or closed, then the topology \tau on Y is the quotient topology induced by f.
So f has to be onto doesn't it? Otherwise there will be multiple topologies on Y that satisfy the hypotheses but are not the quotient topology?
If X and Y are topological spaces and f:X\to Y is continuous and either open or closed, then the topology \tau on Y is the quotient topology induced by f.
So f has to be onto doesn't it? Otherwise there will be multiple topologies on Y that satisfy the hypotheses but are not the quotient topology?