Algebraic closure of a subset 
 of a vector space 
 is the set of all points that are linearly accessible from 
. It is denoted by 
 or 
. 
A point 
 is said to be linearly accessible from a subset 
 if there exists some 
 such that the line segment 
 is contained in 
. 
Necessarily, 
 (the last inclusion holds when X is equipped by any vector topology, Hausdorff or not). 
The set A is algebraically closed if 
. The set 
 is the algebraic boundary of A in X. 
  Examples
 The set 
 of rational numbers is algebraically closed but 
 is not algebraically open 
If 
 then  
. In particular, the algebraic closure need not be algebraically closed. Here, 
. 
However, 
 for every finite-dimensional convex set A. 
Moreover, a convex set is algebraically closed if and only if its complement is algebraically open. 
 See also
  References
  
 Bibliography
 - Narici, Lawrence; Beckenstein, Edward (2011). Topological Vector Spaces. Pure and applied mathematics (Second ed.). Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press. ISBN 978-1584888666. OCLC 144216834.
 
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