Proving Boundedness and Inclusion of Sup and Inf in a Compact and Nonempty Set E

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In summary: Well, we did a proof or the heine Borel Theorem.A set is closed iff every accumulation point of E belongs to E.What is an accumulation point?An accumulation point of a set is a point that can be approximated by elements of the set. In other words, every neighborhood of the accumulation point contains infinitely many points from the set.
  • #1
kathrynag
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Homework Statement


Let E be compact and nonempty. Prove that E is bounded and that sup E and inf E both belong to E.


Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution


E is compact, so for every family{[tex]G_{\alpha}[/tex]}[tex]_{\alpha\in}A[/tex] of open sets such that E[tex]\subset[/tex][tex]\cup_{\alpha\in}A[/tex][tex]G_{\alpha}[/tex], there is a finite set{a1,a2...,an}[tex]\subset[/tex]A such that E[tex]\subset[/tex][tex]\cup^{n}_{i=1}[/tex][tex]G_{\alpha_{i}}[/tex]
 
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  • #2
kathrynag said:

Homework Statement


Let E be compact and nonempty. Prove that E is bounded and that sup E and inf E both belong to E.
I assume you talk about E as a subset of the real numbers?
kathrynag said:

The Attempt at a Solution


E is compact, so for every family{[tex]G_{\alpha}[/tex]}[tex]_{\alpha\in}A[/tex] of open sets such that E[tex]\subset[/tex][tex]\cup_{\alpha\in}A[/tex][tex]G_{\alpha}[/tex], there is a finite set{a1,a2...,an}[tex]\subset[/tex]A such that E[tex]\subset[/tex][tex]\cup^{n}_{i=1}[/tex][tex]G_{\alpha_{i}}[/tex]

This is not an attempt at a solution but the mere definition of compactness.

Start with the easiest part of the question, that E is bounded. By the compactness of E it can be covered by a finite subset of any open cover. Can you always find an open cover which contains only bounded sets? What does it then mean for E to be a subset of the union of a finite sub-collection of this open cover?
 
  • #3
Pere Callahan said:
I assume you talk about E as a subset of the real numbers?


This is not an attempt at a solution but the mere definition of compactness.

Start with the easiest part of the question, that E is bounded. By the compactness of E it can be covered by a finite subset of any open cover. Can you always find an open cover which contains only bounded sets? What does it then mean for E to be a subset of the union of a finite sub-collection of this open cover?

Yes, E is a subset of the real numbers.
An open cover will have bounded sets if there is a finite subcover?
If E is a subset of the finite collection, then E will be bounded and have a sup and inf?
 
  • #4
Have you already proved that every compact set, in a metric space, is closed and bounded?
 
  • #5
Oh yeah I forgot about that by the Heine Borel Theorem.
 
  • #6
So that takes care of E being bounded, so now I need to show that there is sup E and inf E. Does this follow from E being bounded?
 
  • #7
No, the Heine Borel theorem says any closed and bounded set is compact. The fact that every compact set is both closed and bounded is true but is not the "Heine Borel" theorem. For one thing, the Heine Borel theorem is true only in the real numbers or products of the real numbers (and so not in the rational numbers) but a compact set is both closed and bounded for all metric spaces.

Okay, E is bounded. What is the "least upper bound property" for real numbers?
 
  • #8
HallsofIvy said:
No, the Heine Borel theorem says any closed and bounded set is compact. The fact that every compact set is both closed and bounded is true but is not the "Heine Borel" theorem. For one thing, the Heine Borel theorem is true only in the real numbers or products of the real numbers (and so not in the rational numbers) but a compact set is both closed and bounded for all metric spaces.

Okay, E is bounded. What is the "least upper bound property" for real numbers?

A set is bounded if it is bounded from both above and below.
A real number a is a least upper bound of for S if a is a upper bound for S having the property that if b is also an upper bound for S, then a<b.
 
  • #9
If there is a bounded, there will be some [tex]x_{1}[/tex]<[tex]x_{2}[/tex]. therefore a sup E?
 
  • #10
kathrynag said:
If there is a bounded, there will be some [tex]x_{1}[/tex]<[tex]x_{2}[/tex]. therefore a sup E?

What do you mean by x1 and x2?
And what is the relationship betweeen boundedness of sets and least upper bounds?
 
  • #11
Pere Callahan said:
What do you mean by x1 and x2?
And what is the relationship betweeen boundedness of sets and least upper bounds?

I was meaning there would be a set containing x1,x2,x3,...xn.
Well, a set is bounded from above and blow. A set must be bounded from above to have a lub, so E must have a lub?
 
  • #12
The least upper bound property states that every bounded set E has a least upper bound, called the supremum, denoted sup E.
You want to show that if E is compact (and thus bounded), the supremum of E actually belongs to E. How would you do that. Have you already proved that every compact set (in the reals) is closed?
If so, how does from the set E being closed follow that sup E is in E?
 
  • #13
Well, every compact set is closed and bounded. Then sup E is in E because E is a bounded set.
 
  • #14
kathrynag said:
Then sup E is in E because E is a bounded set.
No, A= (0,1) is also bounded but sup A = 1 is not an element of (0,1). [itex]\sup E\in E[/itex] must follow from the closedness and if you have not proved it in class yet, you will have to think of an argument yourself.

What is the definition of open and closed?
 
  • #15
Pere Callahan said:
No, A= (0,1) is also bounded but sup A = 1 is not an element of (0,1). [itex]\sup E\in E[/itex] must follow from the closedness and if you have not proved it in class yet, you will have to think of an argument yourself.

What is the definition of open and closed?

Well, we did a proof or the heine Borel Theorem.
A set is closed iff every accumulation point of E belongs to E.
 
  • #16
So you would have to think about whether or not sup E is an accumulation point of E :smile:
 
  • #17
Pere Callahan said:
So you would have to think about whether or not sup E is an accumulation point of E :smile:

Ok, I would think it is because a neighborhood of sup E will contain infinitely many points of E.
 
  • #18
kathrynag said:
Ok, I would think it is because a neighborhood of sup E will contain infinitely many points of E.
That's the definition of sup E being an accumulation point. How would you show that any neighbourhood of sup E contains infinitely many elements of E?

Sorry for being picky but I want to make sure you're not just quoting lines from your notes:smile:
 
  • #19
kathrynag said:
A set is bounded if it is bounded from both above and below.
A real number a is a least upper bound of for S if a is a upper bound for S having the property that if b is also an upper bound for S, then a<b.
That is the definition of "least upper bound"= lub= sup. I asked if you knew the "least upper bound property" and apparently you don't. It is "every set of real numbers, having an upper bound, must have a least upper bound". And, of course the same is true of lower bound and "greatest lower bound".

kathrynag said:
I was meaning there would be a set containing x1,x2,x3,...xn.
But you still haven't said what x1, x2, x3, ..., xn are so that makes no sense!

Well, a set is bounded from above and blow. A set must be bounded from above to have a lub, so E must have a lub?
Yes, but more to the point, if a set is bounded from above, it has a lub. You have the logic reversed.

kathrynag said:
Well, every compact set is closed and bounded. Then sup E is in E because E is a bounded set.
No, sup E exists because E is bounded. (0, 1) has upper bound 2. What is its lub? Is that in (0,1)? The lub is in E here because of another property of E.
 

1. What is a compact set?

A compact set is a subset of a metric space that is closed and bounded. This means that every sequence in the set has a limit point within the set itself, and the set is contained within a finite distance from any point in the space.

2. How do you prove boundedness of a set?

To prove boundedness of a set, you must show that there exists a finite distance that contains all the points in the set. This can be done by finding the maximum and minimum values of the set, or by showing that the set is contained within a larger set that is known to be bounded.

3. What does it mean for a set to be nonempty?

A set is nonempty if it contains at least one element. In other words, there is at least one object or value within the set.

4. How do you prove inclusion of sup and inf in a set?

To prove inclusion of sup and inf in a set, you must show that the supremum (sup) and infimum (inf) of the set are contained within the set itself. This can be done by finding the maximum and minimum values of the set, or by showing that the set is contained within a larger set that has known sup and inf values.

5. Why is it important to prove boundedness and inclusion in a compact and nonempty set?

Proving boundedness and inclusion in a compact and nonempty set is important because it ensures that the set is well-defined and has certain properties that allow for further analysis and calculations. It also helps to establish the existence of certain important values, such as sup and inf, which can be used in various mathematical proofs and applications.

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