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Kahoo
Frequent VisitorJoined: 29 Oct 2003Posts: 211
Location: HKU Math
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Posted: Wed Nov 03, 2004 3:08 pm Post subject: Continuous Functions
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Is the following correct?
Claim: Continuous functions map accumulation points to accumulation points.
Proof
Let be continuous, . Suppose . We will show that .
Fix . We need to show that is non-empty. Indeed, since is continuous, there exists such that whenever . Now , so we can pick with . For this , we have and , i.e. is non-empty, as desired.
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Fraser
Joined: 21 Jul 2004Posts: 19
Location: Math CUHK
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Posted: Wed Nov 03, 2004 5:42 pm Post subject: Re: Continuous Functions
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Kahoo wrote:
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Is the following correct?
Claim: Continuous functions map accumulation points to accumulation points.
Proof
Let be continuous, . Suppose . We will show that .
Fix . We need to show that is non-empty. Indeed, since is continuous, there exists such that whenever . Now , so we can pick with . For this , we have and , i.e. is non-empty, as desired.
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There is one fatal flaw in your proof.
Indeed the definition of accumulation point, is that every neighborhood of x contains another element x’ DISTINCT from x. In your proof, you just show that given , it can be satisfied that
for all such x’, but not show that there exist ONE x’ such that , and
, i.e. One such counterexample is the constant function
where x=0 is an accumulation point of , but . But modify the statement to be: if x is a point in closure of A, and f is a continuous map, then f(a) belongs to the closure of f(A), then you would be correct. Indeed this statement is equivalent to continuity of the function f._________________Few, but ripe.
—- Carl Friedrich Gauss
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