operationsres said:
Hi, thanks.
How is N(.) continuous at +∞ if the domain doesn't even include +∞? Also you say "OK for one-sided limits, provided that you also include the choice N(-∞) as well." - are you saying here that I have to evaluate it at both sides? Why can't I just evaluate it at one side (e.g. 0^+?
Well, maybe the limit a/b as b → 0 is -∞. For example, if a = -1 and we let b → 0 through positive values (written as b → 0+), the limit will be -∞. If a = +1 and b → 0+, the limit will be +∞, etc. Just look at the graph of a/b for a fixed and b variable; what does the graph look like when b approaches 0 on either side of the origin?
As to how N(.) is continuous at +∞ if the domain doesn't even include +∞, well that is just a shorthand statement that all the limits go through as you want them to. Certainly,
\lim_{x \to +\infty} N(x) = 1 exists, as does
\lim_{x \to -\infty} N(x) = 0.
In fact, these hold for any legitimate cdf and do not require normality; they are even true for discrete random variables such as the binomial or Poisson, etc. All we require is that
F(x) \to 0 \text{ as } x \to -\infty \text{ and } F(x) \to 1 \text{ as } x \to +\infty,
which are, essentially, part of the definition of a legitimate cdf F(.). (By legitimate, I mean that P{ℝ} = 1,so we do
not have positive probabilities that X = +∞ or X = -∞.)
RGV