Recent content by zeebo17
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Equation of a vertical line in the complex plane
Oh! Great, thanks!- zeebo17
- Post #3
- Forum: Calculus and Beyond Homework Help
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Equation of a vertical line in the complex plane
Homework Statement I need to solve \int_L \bar{z}-1 where L is the line from 1 to 1+2i. Homework Equations The Attempt at a Solution I know that I need to set z equal to the equation of the line and then integrate, but in this case I'm not sure how to express the equation of...- zeebo17
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- Complex Complex plane Line Plane Vertical
- Replies: 2
- Forum: Calculus and Beyond Homework Help
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Graduate Exploring the Countable Infinity of Disjoint Sets and their Cartesian Product
Hi, I was wondering if two sets are disjoint countably infinite sets why is their Cartesian product also countably infinite? Thanks!- zeebo17
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- Infinite Sets
- Replies: 5
- Forum: Set Theory, Logic, Probability, Statistics
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Graduate Comparing Measures on Finite & Countably Infinite Sets
Ok, great- Thanks! I think I can get the rest from there. The other thing I was wondering about was how to deal with that when A it is instead a countably infinite set. My book says that they would be equal in this case, but I'm not sure I see how. -
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Graduate Comparing Measures on Finite & Countably Infinite Sets
The bar means the number of elements in that set.I'm trying to understand what the difference is between \overline{F(A \times A)} and \overline{F(A) \times F(A)} so I can determine which has the most elements or which is "bigger'." -
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Graduate Comparing Measures on Finite & Countably Infinite Sets
I'm not sure, the book refers to F(A) as the power set. -
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Graduate Comparing Measures on Finite & Countably Infinite Sets
I just started learning some basic measure theory. Could someone explain the difference between \overline{F(A \times A)} and \overline{F(A) \times F(A)} where A is a finite set. Also, how would this be different in A was an countably infinite set? Thanks! -
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Graduate Measuring Sets: Finite vs. Countably Infinite
I just started learning some basic measure theory. Could someone explain the difference between \overline{F(A \times A)} and \overline{F(A) \times F(A)} where A is a finite set. Also, how would this be different in A was an countably infinite set? Thanks!- zeebo17
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- Finite Infinite Measuring Sets
- Replies: 1
- Forum: Set Theory, Logic, Probability, Statistics
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Undergrad Converting 1/7 to Base 2: A Scientific Approach
What is 1/7 in base 2? How would you solve for this? Thanks!- zeebo17
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- Base
- Replies: 8
- Forum: General Math
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Continuous function / epsilon-delta
Ok, Would this work: If h(x)> h(a) then h(x)>0 since h(x)>h(a)>0. If h(x)<h(a) then h(a)-h(x) > 0. Then because h is a continuous function there exists a \delta>0 such that |x-a|< \delta implies that |h(x)-h(a)|< \epsilon . In this case h(a)-h(x) > 0, so 0 < h(a)-h(x) < \epsilon...- zeebo17
- Post #5
- Forum: Calculus and Beyond Homework Help
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Graduate Uniform convegence and continuity
Sorry, say we have a series f(x)= \Sigma n \cos(nx) e^{-n^2 x} and know that is converges uniformly on some interval [a, \infty) could we then conclude that it was continuous for all x in [a, \infty) ? I know there is a theorem that says that in order for there to be uniform... -
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Continuous function / epsilon-delta
Yes, that makes sense intuitively. I'm still unsure how to start writing a formal proof though.- zeebo17
- Post #3
- Forum: Calculus and Beyond Homework Help
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Graduate Uniform convegence and continuity
If we know that some function f(x) converges uniformly on some interval does that imply that it is also continuous on the interval? -
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Continuous function / epsilon-delta
Homework Statement Let h: \Re \rightarrow \Re be a continuous function such that h(a)>0 for some a \in \Re. Prove that there exists a \delta >0 such that h(x)>0 provided that |x-a|< \delta . Homework Equations Continuity of h means that there exists and \epsilon >0 such that...- zeebo17
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- Continuous Function
- Replies: 4
- Forum: Calculus and Beyond Homework Help
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Undergrad Power series of inverse trig functions
How do you find the power series for inverse trig functions? Can I find the power series for arcsin by manipulating the power series for sin? Thanks!