Suppose that we have two topological spaces $(X,T_1)$, $(X,T_2)$ such that $T_1\subset T_2$ and $K\subset X$ is compact in $T_1$ topology. Is it also compact in $T_2$ topology ???
I think that the answer is yes, because we can cover $K$ with a finite collection of open sets that belong in $T_1$ topology, but we know that these open sets belong also in $T_2$, so it is going to be compact in $T_2$.
Is this true ??
No, but it does go the other way.
Consider an extreme example. Consider the set $\mathbb{N}$ with two different topologies. First, let $T_1 = \{ \emptyset , \mathbb{N} \}$, the "trivial topology", and let $T_2 = \mathcal{P}( \mathbb{N} )$ be the discrete topology on $\mathbb{N}$. Then $\mathbb{N}$ is compact in $T_1$, but not in $T_2$. Specifically, consider the open cover $\mathcal{U} = \{ U_k \}_{k \in \mathbb{N}}$, where $U_k = \{ k \}$. Then $\mathcal{U}$ is an open cover of $\mathbb{N}$ with no finite subcover.