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Compactness and Connectedness Continuity Theorems.

This document defines and discusses concepts related to compact sets, connected sets, and continuous functions on subsets of the real numbers. It provides definitions for compact sets, open and closed sets relative to a subset of R, and connected sets. It then defines continuity of functions at a point and on a set. It characterizes continuous functions using preimages and proves properties of continuous functions, including that they map compact sets to compact sets, connected sets to connected sets, and are uniformly continuous on compact sets. It also characterizes compact sets and proves R is connected.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
472 views

Compactness and Connectedness Continuity Theorems.

This document defines and discusses concepts related to compact sets, connected sets, and continuous functions on subsets of the real numbers. It provides definitions for compact sets, open and closed sets relative to a subset of R, and connected sets. It then defines continuity of functions at a point and on a set. It characterizes continuous functions using preimages and proves properties of continuous functions, including that they map compact sets to compact sets, connected sets to connected sets, and are uniformly continuous on compact sets. It also characterizes compact sets and proves R is connected.

Uploaded by

ap021
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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COMPACT SETS, CONNECTED SETS AND CONTINUOUS FUNCTIONS

1. Definitions
1.1. D R is compact if and only if for any given open covering of D we can subtract a finite
sucovering. That is, given (G ) A a collection of open subsets of R (A an arbitrary set of indices)
such that D A G , then there exists finitely many indices 1 , . . . , N A such that D N
i=1 G1 .
1.2. Let D an arbitrary subset of R. Then A D is open in D (or relative to D, or D-open) if and
only if there exists G open subset of R such that D = G D. Similarly we can define the notion of
D-closed sets. Note that D is both open and closed in D, and so is .
1.3. D R is connected if and only if and D are the only subsets of D which are both open in D
and closed in D. In other words, if D = A B and A, B are disjoint D-open subsets of D, then either
A = or B = .
1.4. Let D R, a D a fixed element and f : D R an arbitrary function. By definition, f is
continuous at a if and only if the following property holds
> 0,

a () > 0 such that |x a| < a () x D |f (x) f (a)| <

The last implication can be re-written in terms of sets as follows:


f Ba a () D Bf (a) ()
Here we use the notation Bx (r) := (x r, x + r).
1.5. Sequence characterization of continuity: f is continuous at a iff for any sequence (xn )n1 such that
xn D, n 1 and limn xn = a, we have limn f (xn ) = f (a).
1.6. We say that f : D R is continuous on D (or simply say continuous) if and only if f is continuous
at every a D.
2. Characterization of continuous functions using preimages
2.1. Theorem. Let D R and f : D R a function. Then the following propositions are equivalent:
a) f is continuous (on D).
b) G R open, f 1 (G) is open in D.
c) F R closed, f 1 (F ) is closed in D.
Proof. a b. Let G R open. Pick a f 1 (G). Then f (a) G, and since G is open, there must exist
> 0 such that
Bf (a) () G. By continuity, corresponding to this > 0 there exists > 0 such that
f Ba () D Bf (a) (). But this places the entire set Ba () D inside f 1 (G):
Ba () D f 1 (G)
Writing now = a to mark the dependence of on a, and varying a f 1 (G), we obtain

f 1 (G) = af 1 (G) Ba (a ) D
which shows that f 1 (G) is open in D.
b c. Let F R a closed set, which is equivalent to saying that G = CF (the complement in R) is open.
Then
f 1 (F ) = {x D|f (x) F } = {x D|f (x)
/ G} = D f 1 (G)
Since the complement of a D-open subset of D is D-closed, it means that f 1 (F ) is closed in D if and
only if f 1 (G) is open in D.
c a: exercise.
1

COMPACT SETS, CONNECTED SETS AND CONTINUOUS FUNCTIONS

2.2. Using this characterization, we can prove for example that the composition of continuous functions
is a continuous function.
Proposition. Assume f : D R is continuous, g : E R is continuous, and f (D) E. Then the
function h := g f : D R defined by h(x) = g(f (x)) is continuous.

Proof. Let G R an open set. Then h1 (G) = f 1 g 1 (G) . But g 1 (G) = V E, for some open set
V R. But then h1 (G) = f 1 (V E) = f 1 (V ) is open in D, so h is continuous.
2.2.1. Example. Assume f : D R is a continuous function, such that f (x) =
6 0, x D. Then
h : D R given by h(x) = 1/f (x), is continuous as well. Proof: g : R {0} R, g(x) = 1/x is
continuous (proved in class), f (D) R {0}, hence h = g f is continuous.
3. General properties continuous functions
3.1.

Theorem. A continuous function maps compact sets into compact sets.

Proof. In other words, assume f : D R is continuous and D is compact. Then we need to prove that
the image f (D) is a compact subset of R. For that, we consider an arbitrary open covering f (D) G
of f (D) and we will try to find a finite subcovering. Taking the preimage we have D f 1 (G ).
But f 1 (G ) is open in D, so there must exist V R open such that f 1 (G ) = V D. Then
D (V D) which simply means that D V . We thus arrived at an open covering of D,
so there must exist finitely many indices 1 , . . . , N such that D N
i=1 Vi , which implies the equality
1
N
(Gi ). But this implies in turn that f (D) N
D = N
i=1 Gi . So f (D) is compact.
i=1 (Vi D) = i=1 f
3.2.

Theorem. A continuous function maps connected sets into connected sets.

In other words, assume f : D R is continuous and D is connected. Then f (D) is connected as well.
Proof. Assume f (D) is not connected. Then there must exist A, B disjoint, non-empty, subsets of f (D),
both open relative to f (D), such that f (D) = A B. Being open relative to f (D) simply means there
exists U, V R open such that A = f (D) U , B = f (D) V . So f (D) U V . But this implies that
D f 1 (U ) f 1 (V ). Since U, V are open, it follows that f 1 (U ) and f 1 (V ) are open relative to D.
But they are also disjoint (why?). Since D is connected, it follows that at least one of them, say f 1 (U ),
is empty. But A U , so this forces f 1 (A) = as well, which is impossible unless A = (note that A
is a subset of the image of f ), contradiction.
3.3.

Theorem. A continuous function on a compact set is uniformly continuous.

Proof. Assume D compact and f : D R continuous. Given > 0 we need to find () > 0 such that
if x, y D and |x y| < (), then |f (x) f (y)| < .
From the definition of continuity, given such > 0 and x D, there exists x () such that if |yx| < x (),
then |f (y) f (x)| < . Clearly D xD Bx ( 21 (/2)). From this open covering we can extract a finite
subcovering (D is compact!), meaning there must exists finitely many x1 , x2 , . . . , xN D such that
1
D N
i=1 Bxi ( 2 xi (/2)).
Let now () = min{ 12 x1 (/2), . . . , 21 xN (/2)}. We will show that () does the job.
Take y, z D arbitrary such that |y z| < (). The idea is that y will be near some xj , which in turn
places z near that same xj . But that forces both f (y), f (z) to be close to f (xj ) (by continuity at xj ),
and hence close to each other.
Since y D, there must exist some j, 1 j N such that y Bxj ( 12 xj (/2)). Thus
|y xj | < 12 xj (/2)
but |y z| < () 12 xj (/2)
By the triangle inequality it follows that |z x| < xj (/2). So y, z are within xj (/2) of x. This implies
that
|f (y) f (xj )| < /2
|f (z) f (xj )| < /2
By the triangle inequality once again we have |f (y) f (z)| < .
Alternative proof, using sequences. Assume f is not uniformly continuous, meaning that there exists
> 0 such that no > 0 does the job. Checking what this means for = n1 , we see that for any such
n 1 there exist xn , yn D such that |xn yn | < n1 and yet |f (xn ) f (yn )| > . However D is compact,
in particular any sequence in D has a convergent subsequence whose limit belongs to D. Applying this
principle twice we find that there must exist n1 < n2 < . . . such that the subsequences (xnk )k1 and
(ynk )k1 are convergent, and x = limk xnk D, y = limk ynk D. We have the following:

COMPACT SETS, CONNECTED SETS AND CONTINUOUS FUNCTIONS

By construction, |xnk ynk | < n1k k1 . Taking the limit, we find x = y.


By continuity, limk f (xnk ) = f (x), since x D. Also limk f (ynk ) = f (y).
Also by construction, |f (xnk ) f (ynk )| > hence in the limit, |f (x) f (y)| .
We thus reach a contradiction.
4. Characterization of the compact sets and the connected sets of R
4.1.

Theorem. In R, compact = bounded & closed.

We prove more, namely:


4.2. Proposition. Let D R. Then the following propositions are equivalent:
a) D is compact
b) D is bounded and closed
c) Every sequence in D has a convergent subsequence whose limit belongs to D.
Proof. a b. D R = n=1 (n, n) is an open covering of D. Hence N 1 such that D
N
n=1 (n, n) = (N, N ). This shows D is bounded. To prove D is closed, we prove that R D is
1 1
open. Let y R D. Then D
n=1 (R [y n , n ]) (why?). This open covering must have a finite
1
subcovering, so N 1 such that D R [y N , y + N1 ]. But this implies that (y N1 , y + N1 ) R D.
But y was chosen arbitrary in R D, so this set is open, and hence D itself is closed.
b c. This has to do with the fact that every bounded sequence has a convergent subsequence.
c b. Here one shows D = D and this has to do with the fact that D is the set of limits of convergent
sequences of D, etc...
c a Let D
k=1 Gk be an arbitrary open covering of D. (Note: a covering by a countable collection
of open sets is not the most general infinite open covering one can imagine, of course; we need an
intermediate step to prove that from any open covering of D we can extract a countable subcovering,
and this has to do with the fact that R admits a countable dense set. Read the details of this step in
the textbook.) Lets prove there exists n 1 such that D
n=1 Gk . Assume this was not the case.
Then n 1, there exists xn D nk=1 Gk . But xn is a sequence in D, so it must have a convergent
subsequence, call it (xnj )j1 , with limit in D, so limj xnj = a D. But a belongs to one of the G0i s,
say a GN . Since GN is open, it follows that xnj GN , for j j0 (j large enough). In particular
nj
this shows that for j large enough (larger than j0 and larger than N ) we have xnj GN k=1
, since
nj j > N . This contradicts the defining property of xn s.
4.3.

Theorem. R is connected.

Proof. This is really the statement that and R itself are the only subsets of R which are both open and
closed. To prove this, let E be a non-empty subset of R with this property. Well prove that E = R. For
that, take an arbitrary c R. To prove that c E, we assume that c
/ E and look for a contradiction.
Since E is non-empty, it follows that E either has points to the left of c or to the right of c. Assume the
former holds.
) Consider the set S = {x E|x < c}. By construction, S is bounded from above (c is an upper bound
for S). Therefore we can consider y = l.u.b.(S) R.
) Input: E is closed. Then S = E (, c] is also closed. Then y S = S, so y < c.
) Input: E is open. y S E and E is open, this means that there exists > 0 such that (y , y +)
E. Choose small enough so that < c y. In that case z = y + 2 (y , y + ) E is an element of
E which the properties
z < c, hence z S
z>y
which is in contradiction with the defining property of y.
4.4. Theorem. The only connected subsets of R are the intervals (bounded or unbounded, open or
closed or neither).
Proof. First we prove that a connected subset of R must be an interval.
Step 1. Let E R a connected subset. We prove that if a b E, then [a, b] E. In other words,
together with any two elements, E contains the entire interval between them. To see this, let c a real
number between a and b. Assume c
/ E. Then E = A B, where A = (, c) E and B = (c, +) E.
Note that A and B are disjoint subsets of D, both open relative to D. Since E is connected, at least one
of them should be empty, contradiction, since a A and b B. Thus c E.
Step 2. To show that E is actually an interval, consider inf E and sup E. Case one. E is bounded. Then

COMPACT SETS, CONNECTED SETS AND CONTINUOUS FUNCTIONS

m = inf E, M = sup E R, and clearly E [m, M ]. On the other hand, for any given x (m, M ),
there exists a, b E such that a < x < b. Thats because m, M E and one can find elements of E
as close to m (resp. M ) as desired (draw a picture with the interval (m, M ) and place a point x inside
it). But then [a, b] E, and in particular x E. Since x was chosen arbitrarily in (m, M ), we must
have (m, M ) E [m, M ], so E is definitely an interval. Case two: E is unbounded. With a similar
argument, show that E is an unbounded interval.
Conversely, we need to show that intervals are indeed connected sets. The proof is almost identical to
that in the case where the interval is R itself.
5. Corollaries: theorems for continuous functions on R
5.1. Theorem. Let D R compact and f : D R a continuous function. Then there exists y1 , y2 D
such that f (y1 ) f (x) f (y2 ), x D.
Proof. f (D) is a compact subset of R, so it is bounded and closed. This implies that g.l.b(f (D)) f (D)
and l.u.b.(f (D)) f (D) as well. But then there must exist y1 , y2 D such that f (y1 ) = g.l.b.f (D) and
f (y2 ) = l.u.b.f (D). But this implies f (D) [f (y1 ), f (y2 )] and we are done.
Note: one uses the notation supxD f (x) to denote the l.u.b. of the image of D. In other words,
supxD f (x) = l.u.b.{f (y) | y D}. The theorem says that if D is compact and f is continuous, then
supxD f (x) is finite, and more over that there exists y1 D such that f (y1 ) = supxD f (y). If the
domain is not compact, one can find examples of continuous functions such that either i) sup f = + or
such that ii) sup f is a real number but not in the image of f .
For case i), take f (x) = 1/x defined on (0, 1]. For case ii), take f (x) = x defined on [0, 1).
5.2. Theorem. A continuous (real-valued) function defined on an interval in R has the intermediate
value property.
Proof. Assume E is an interval in R and f : E R a continuous function. Let a, b E (say a < b) and
y a number between f (a) and f (b). The intermediate value property is the statement that there exists c
between a and b such that f (c) = y. But this follows immediately from the fact that f (E) is an interval.
(E is an interval in R E is connected f (E) is a connected subset of R f (E) is an interval in R).
5.3.

Problem. Prove that there does not exist a continuous, bijective function f : [0, 1) R.

Answer. Assume such a function exists. Then f ([0, 12 ]) is a compact subset of R, so it is bounded. There
must exist N > 0 such that f ([0, 12 ]) [N, N ]. But f is assumed to be surjective, so there must exist
a, b [0, 1) such that f (a) = N 1 and f (b) = N + 1. Certainly a, b ( 21 , 1). By the intermediate
value property [N 1, N + 1] f (( 21 , 1)). In particular f (0) f (( 12 , 1)), which means that there exists
c ( 21 , 1) such that f (0) = f (c). But this means f is not injective, contradiction.

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