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HW6 2

This document contains the solutions to 4 exercises in real analysis homework 6 by student Wuyue Zhou. In the first exercise, Zhou determines whether several sets are open, closed, or neither by examining whether points are contained or limit points are contained. The second exercise proves a theorem stating a set is closed if and only if every Cauchy sequence in the set converges to a point in the set. The third exercise shows that if a set is compact and nonempty, the supremum and infimum of the set must be elements of the set. The fourth exercise determines whether several statements about compact and closed sets are true or false, providing proofs or counterexamples for each.

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

HW6 2

This document contains the solutions to 4 exercises in real analysis homework 6 by student Wuyue Zhou. In the first exercise, Zhou determines whether several sets are open, closed, or neither by examining whether points are contained or limit points are contained. The second exercise proves a theorem stating a set is closed if and only if every Cauchy sequence in the set converges to a point in the set. The third exercise shows that if a set is compact and nonempty, the supremum and infimum of the set must be elements of the set. The fourth exercise determines whether several statements about compact and closed sets are true or false, providing proofs or counterexamples for each.

Uploaded by

Wuyue Zhou
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Real Analysis Homework 6

MATH 301 Due October 22, 2019

Name: Wuyue Zhou

Exercise 1. (3.2.3) Decide whether the following sets are open, closed, or neither. If a set
is not open, find a point in the set for which there is no ε-neighborhood contained in the set.
If a set is not closed, find a limit point that is not contained in the set.

a.) Q

b.) N

c.) {x ∈ R : x 6= 0}

d.) {1 + 1/4 + 1/9 + · · · + 1/n2 : n ∈ N}

3.) {1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + · · · + 1/n : n ∈ N}

Solution
a.) This set of rational numbers is neither open nor closed. For example, 1 ∈ Q and there
is no -neighborhood that is in Q for 1. Since for every  > 0, there exists an irrational

number, for example 22  + a when  ∈ Q or 12  + a when  6∈ Q. Both examples belongs to
the -neighborhood, but one of them must belongs to the set of irrational numbers and thus
is not in Q. Therefore, we cannot find an -neighborhood for 1 ∈ Q. Thus, Q is not open. It
is also not closed since every irrational number can be a limit point for the set. For example,

2 is a limit point for the set since Q is dense in R. Thus, for every -neighborhood for
irrational numbers, there is an intersection with Q. However, these irrational numbers are
not in Q.
b.) The set of natural numbers is closed but not open. Use 1 as our example, there is no
-neighborhood for 1 that belongs to N. This is because that every -neighborhood contains
some points that are not natural numbers. Thus, N is not open. N has no limit points
since for any point a ∈ R, there can be a small  that is smaller than the digital part of a.
Therefore, the -neighborhood does not intersect with N. Thus, N does not have any limit
point, so N is closed.
c.) This set is open since for all a ∈ {x ∈ R : x 6= 0} there exists an -neighborhood for
a. The set is not closed because 0 is a limit point for the set, as there exists a sequence of
rational numbers in the set that converges to 0. However, the set does not contain 0.
d.) This set is not open since for 1 ∈ {1 + 1/4 + 1/9 + · · · + 1/n2 : n ∈ N}, there is no -
neighborhood that belongs to the original set. This is because that -neighborhood contains

1
Real Analysis HW 6 Due October 22, 2019

continuous points and does not belong to a set of isolated points. This set is not closed since
2
the whole set converges to π6 , which is a limit point that is not in the set.
e.)This set is not open since for 1, there is no -neighborhood that belongs to the original
set. This is because that -neighborhood contains continuous points and does not belong to
a set of isolated points. This set is closed because there is no limit point for this set.


Citation: For this exercise, I used the following sources: None.

Exercise 2. (3.2.5) Prove Theorem 3.2.8.

Solution
(⇒) We want to prove that if a set F ∈ R is closed, then every Cauchy sequence contained
in F has a limit that is also an element of F . Assume that there is an arbitrary Cauchy
sequence (an ), then (an ) → a for some a ∈ R. If there exists some N ∈ N that allows aN = a,
when aN ∈ (an ), then, a ∈ F since (an ) ⊆ F . If there is no N ∈ N that allows aN = a, then
by theorem 3.2.5 a is a limit point. By definition of a closed set, a ∈ F . Since we picked an
arbitrary (an ), then for any Cauchy sequence contained in F , its limit is also in F .
(⇐) We want to prove that if every Cauchy sequence contained in F has a limit that is
also an element of F , then F is closed. Assume that there is an arbitrary Cauchy sequence
(an ), then (an ) → a for some a ∈ R. If there exists some N ∈ N that allows aN = a, when
aN ∈ (an ), then it fits with our hypothesis. However, if there does not exist such N ∈ N,
then a 6∈ (an ). Thus, by theorem 3.2.5, a is a limit point. Due to our hypothesis, a ∈ F .
Since this is true for every Cauchy sequence in the set F , we know that F contains all its
limit points. Thus, by definition, F is closed.
Therefore, F is closed if and only if every Cauchy sequence contained in F has a limit
that is also an element of F .


Citation: For this exercise, I used the following sources: None.

Exercise 3. (3.3.1) Show that if K is compact and nonempty, then sup K and inf K both
exist and are elements of K.

Solution First, we want to show that supK and infK both exist. Since K is compact, then
from theorem 3.3.4, K is a bounded set(since K is not empty). Thus, since K is bounded

Wuyue Zhou Page 2


Real Analysis HW 6 Due October 22, 2019

above and below, both sup K and inf K exist.


Secondly, we want to prove that both sup K and inf K are elements of K by contradiction.
Denote supK = a, we assume that a 6∈ K. Since a > a −  for any arbitrary  > 0, we know
that a −  is not an upper bound for the set K. Thus, there exists some an ∈ K such that
a −  < an < a. Here, an 6= a since an ∈ K while a 6∈ K. Thus, an is not an upper bound
for the set K and there exist another an+1 such that a −  < an < an+1 < a. Therefore, by
induction we can have that for any arbitrary  > 0, there exists an N ∈ N such that for all
n ≥ N , |an − a| < . Thus, there exists a sequence (an ) in K such that (an ) → a. Since
a 6∈ K, by definition a is a limit point. Thus, since K is closed, a ∈ K. Here, we reach to a
contradiction. Therefore sup K ∈ K. Similarly, we can prove that inf K is also in K.


Citation: For this exercise, I used the following sources: None.

Exercise 4. (3.3.5) Decide whether the following propositions are true or false. If the claim
is valid, supply a short proof, and if the claim is false, provide a counterexample.

a.) The arbitrary intersection of compact sets is compact.

b.) The arbitrary union of compact sets is compact.

c.) Let A ⊆ R be arbitrary, and let K ⊆ R be compact. Then, the intersection A ∩ K is


compact.

d.) If F1 ⊇ F2 ⊇ F3 ⊇ F4 ⊇ · · · is a nested sequence of nonempty closed sets, then the


intersection ∞
T
n=1 Fn 6= ∅.

Solution
a.) This proposition is true. Since compact sets are bounded, then for these closed sets
K1 , K2 , K3 ,...Kn ,... there exists an intersection K where K ⊆ ∩∞ n=1 Kn . Therefore, K is a
subset under any KN for N ∈ N. Since KN is bounded under some M by our hypothesis,
K is also bounded under M . By theorem 3.2.13, the complements of these closed sets are
open: K1c , K2c ,...,Knc ,... are all open sets. Thus, according to theorem 3.2.3, the set S, where
S = K1c ∪ K2c ∪ ... ∪ Knc ∪ ... is also open. Thus, S equals to:

S = K1c ∪ K2c ∪ ... ∪ Knc ∪ ...


= (K1 ∩ K2 )c ∪ ... ∪ Knc ∪ ...
= (K1 ∩ K2 ∩ C ∩ ... ∩ Kn ∩ ...)c

Wuyue Zhou Page 3


Real Analysis HW 6 Due October 22, 2019

Thus, we know that S c is a closed set, where S c = K1 ∩ K2 ∩ C ∩ ... ∩ Kn ∩ ... = K. Since


we proved that the intersection is bounded under M , we also proved that the intersection is
closed, we know that the intersection is then compact.
b.)
This proposition is false. Assume that Kn = [−n, n] for n ∈ N, we know that the union of
Kn is the set R. However, R is not compact since it is not bounded.
c.)
Let A = (1, 2), and let K = [1, 2]. Observe that K is compact since K is bounded and
closed. However, A ∩ K = (1, 2) is not closed and thus not compact.
d.)
For every n ∈ N, pick a point xn ∈ Fn . Since the sets are nested, the sequence (xn ) is
contained in F1 . Thus, since F1 is closed, (xn ) converges to some x ∈ F1 . Similarly, since the
subsequence (xn+1 ) is contained in F2 , and F2 is also closed, we know that x ∈ F2 . Similarly,
x ∈ Fn for all n ∈ N. Thus, the intersection of Fn is not empty.


Citation: For this exercise, I used the following sources:


http://www.csun.edu/ ac53971/courses/math512A/hmwk6s ol5 12A.pdf.

Wuyue Zhou Page 4

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