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Cardinality of infinite sequences of real numbers |
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| Feb26-13, 03:42 PM | #1 |
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Cardinality of infinite sequences of real numbers
I have to prove that the cardinality of the set of infinite sequences of real numbers is equal to the cardinality of the set of real numbers. So:
[tex]A := |\mathbb{R}^\mathbb{N}|=|\mathbb{R}| =: B[/tex] My plan was to define 2 injective maps, 1 from A to B, and 1 from B to A. B <= A is trivial, just map a real number x on the sequence (xxxxxxxxx...). But I can't find a injective map from A to B. Can someone help? |
| Feb26-13, 04:29 PM | #2 |
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You could reduce it to an easier problem first, for example. Something like [tex]|[0,1]^\mathbb{N}|=|[0,1]|[/tex]
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| Feb26-13, 04:48 PM | #3 |
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I would start by thinking about why the cardinality of ##[0,1)^2## is equal to the cardinality ##[0,1)##. To do this you think realize that any element of ##[0,1)^2## can be written as ##(x,y)## where ##x## and ##y## have infinite decimal expansions ##x = a_1 a_2 a_3 ...## and ##y = b_1 b_2 b_3 ... ##, then you can combine these into a unique real number ##z = a_1 b_1 a_2 b_2 a_3 b_3 ...## .
From here, you can generalize this proof to show that ##|[0,1)^\mathbb{N}| = |[0,1)|## by recalling the proof that the rational and natural numbers have the same cardinality. At this point you should be almost home. Good Luck! |
| Feb26-13, 05:03 PM | #4 |
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Cardinality of infinite sequences of real numbers |
| Feb26-13, 05:10 PM | #5 |
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(By the way, I'm sorry that I have edited and updated my post multiple times. I'm still trying to figure out how to use the Tex features properly.) |
| Feb26-13, 08:03 PM | #6 |
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| Feb26-13, 08:15 PM | #7 |
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| Feb27-13, 11:12 AM | #8 |
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"the cardinality of the set of ([countable] infinite) sequences of real numbers" I added "()" to clarify the structure. |
| Feb27-13, 11:35 AM | #9 |
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| Feb27-13, 08:54 PM | #10 |
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How about this:
If you accept that the Reals are uncountable and the rationals are countable, and that a number is rational iff it has an eventually-periodic exoansion: First show that the set , say S , of sequences in ℝN that are eventually-periodic are countable, and then set up a bijection between ℝN\S and the irrationals, sending a sequence to its "natural" decimal expansion. |
| Feb28-13, 12:51 AM | #11 |
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| Feb28-13, 07:03 PM | #12 |
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