MATH 3110 Chapter Notes - Chapter Chapter 13: Limit Of A Sequence, Bounded Set, Contraposition

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Math 3110 - chapter 13 - continuous functions on compact intervals. From here on we shall call nite closed intervals compact intervals. De nition 13. 1 a set s r is said to be sequentially compact if every sequence of points in s has a subsequence converging to a point in s. A compact interval [a, b] is sequentially compact. Proof: let {xn} be any sequence in [a, b]; it is bounded since the interval if nite. By balzano-weierstrass 6. 3, it has a convergent subsequence {xni}; put. Therefore, by the limit location theorem for sequences 5,3a, If f(x) is continuous on a compact interval i, then f(x) is bounded on i. Proof: we prove rst that f(x) is bounded above by proving the contrapositive: if f(x) is not bounded above on the compact interval, then it is not continuous at some point of i. We construct a convergent sequence of points in i on which f(x) .

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