Dragonfall
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Does there exist a continuous function f:\mathbb{R}\rightarrow\mathbb{R} such that f is nowhere constant and \{x:f(x)=0\} is uncountable?
The discussion centers on the existence of a continuous function f: ℝ → ℝ that is nowhere constant and has an uncountable set of zeros. It is established that if f is continuous and zero on any interval containing irrationals, it must be zero everywhere on that interval. A proposed construction involves defining f(x) = 0 on [0,1] and replacing segments with triangle waves, ultimately creating a continuous function that vanishes on the Cantor set, which is uncountable. The discussion also touches on the uniform continuity of the constructed function and the need for a formal definition.
PREREQUISITESMathematicians, students of real analysis, and anyone interested in the properties of continuous functions and their applications in advanced mathematics.
Moo Of Doom said:Take the function f(x) = 0 on [0,1]. Now replace f on the interval [1/3,2/3] with a triangle wave. Now replace f on the intervals [1/9,2/9] and [7/9,8/9] with a similar triangle wave. Repeat this process for every interval on which f is zero, and we have a continuous function that vanishes on the Cantor set (which is uncountable), and is nowhere constant. Replacing the triangle wave with a suitable C^{\infty} function yields an infinitely differentiable function that vanishes uncountably many times but is not constant. If you want it to be continuous but nowhere differentiable, replace each triangle wave with such a function instead.
Moo Of Doom said:"if we infinitely repeat..." simply refers to the limit function of the sequence of functions I described.
Define
<br /> f_1[a,b](x) = \left\{<br /> \begin{array}{cc}<br /> 0 & x \in \left[a,\frac{2a+b}{3}\right]\cup\left[\frac{a+2b}{3},b\right]\\<br /> x-\frac{2a+b}{3} & x \in \left[\frac{2a+b}{3},\frac{a+b}{2}\right]\\<br /> \frac{a+2b}{3}-x & x \in \left[\frac{a+b}{2},\frac{a+2b}{3}\right]<br /> \end{array}<br />
and
<br /> f_{n+1}[a,b](x) = \left\{<br /> \begin{array}{cc}<br /> f_n\left[a,\frac{2a+b}{3}\right](x) & x \in \left[a,\frac{2a+b}{3}\right]\\<br /> x-\frac{2a+b}{3} & x \in \left[\frac{2a+b}{3},\frac{a+b}{2}\right]\\<br /> \frac{a+2b}{3}-x & x \in \left[\frac{a+b}{2},\frac{a+2b}{3}\right]\\<br /> f_n\left[\frac{a+2b}{3},b\right](x) & x \in \left[\frac{a+2b}{3},b\right]<br /> \end{array}<br />
Then f(x) = \lim_{n\to\infty}f_n[0,1](x) is the function I just described.