Properties
The main significance of normal spaces lies in the fact that they admit "enough" continuous real-valued functions, as expressed by the following theorems valid for any normal space X:
The Urysohn lemma:
If A and B are two disjoint closed subsets of X, then there exists a continuous function f from X to the real line R such that f(x) = 0 for all x in A and f(x) = 1 for all x in B.
In fact, we can take the values of f to be entirely within the unit interval [0,1].
(In fancier terms, disjoint closed sets are not only separated by neighbourhoods, but also separated by a function.)
More generally, the Tietze extension theorem:
If A is a closed subset of X and f is a continuous function from A to R, then there exists a continuous function F: X → R which extends f in the sense that F(x) = f(x) for all x in A.
If U is a locally finite open cover of a normal space X, then there is a partition of unity precisely subordinate to U.
(This shows the relationship of normal spaces to paracompactness.)
In fact, any space that satisfies any one of these theorems must be normal.
Relationships to other separation axioms
If a normal space is R0, then it is in fact completely regular.
Thus, anything from "normal R0" to "normal completely regular" is the same as what we normally call normal regular.
Taking Kolmogorov quotients, we see that all normal T1 spacess are Tychonoff.
These are what we normally call normal Hausdorff spaces.
Counterexamples to some variations on these statements can be found in the lists above.
Specifically, Sierpinski space is normal but not regular, while the space of functions from R to itself is Tychonoff but not normal.