Is K a Closed Set for Continuous Functions?

AI Thread Summary
K is shown to be a closed set under the condition that h: R->R is continuous and K={x: h(x)=0}. The discussion emphasizes that since {0} is closed in R, the preimage h^(-1)({0}) must also be closed. Participants clarify that continuity implies that limit points of K must also belong to K, reinforcing the closed set definition. The confusion around the notation and the concept of bijection is addressed, highlighting the importance of understanding inverse images in the context of continuous functions. Overall, the proof hinges on the characterization of continuity and the behavior of sequences converging to limit points.
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Homework Statement



assume h: R->R is continuous on R and let K={x: h(x)=0}. Show that K is a closed set.

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The Attempt at a Solution



since we know h is continuous and h(x)=0. therefore, we know there is a epsilon neighborhood such that x belongs to preimage f^(-1)({0}). I got stuck up to this step since h maps all x's in R to 0 so this could mean all members in R so i don't see it's a closed set at all. please help. I'm confused with this concept.
 
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iamjign said:
since we know h is continuous and h(x)=0. therefore, we know there is a epsilon neighborhood such that x belongs to preimage f^(-1)({0}). I got stuck up to this step since h maps all x's in R to 0 so this could mean all members in R so i don't see it's a closed set at all. please help. I'm confused with this concept.

Since {0} is closed in R. This means that h^{-1}{\{0\}}= \{x\in R:h(x)=0 \}

If the domain D is closed, then the inverse image of every closed set under h is also closed.
 
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Or use the caracterisation of continuity by sequences. Let x_n be a sequence of element of K that converges in R to x. What can you say about h(x)?
 
because {0} is closed in R and f is a function bijected R back to R. therefore, <br /> h^{-1}{\{0\}}= \{x\in R:h(x)=0 \}\supseteq {\{0\}} \supset R?<br />
 
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iamjign said:
because {0} is closed in R and f is a function bijected R back to R. therefore, <br /> h^{-1}{\{0\}}= \{x\in R:h(x)=0 \}\supseteq {\{0\}} \supset R?<br />

That makes no sense whatsoever. R isn't contained in {0} and there is no containment relation between h^(-1){0} and {0} either. Start really simple. Let h(x)=cos(x). What is h^(-1){0}? Is it closed? Just to make sure you actually understand what the problem is.
 
sorry i mixed up the symbol it should be the reverse. and h^{-1}{\{0\}} \subset R.
 
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iamjign said:
sorry i mixed up the symbol it should be the reverse. and h^{-1}{\{0\}} \subset R.

That makes it a little better, but it's still not a proof. There's no 'bijection' here.
 
The very first time I was called upon to present a proof in graduate school, it involved "f-1(A)" for a set A. I assumed f had an inverse function and was very embarrassed when it was pointed out to me that the notation f-1(A) does NOT imply that. If f is, in fact, "one-to-one" then f-1({0})= {0} is a singleton set which is trivially closed. The problem is when f is NOT one-to-one and so is does not have an inverse function.

It is certainly true that R\{0} is an open set. Can you use the fact that f-1({0})= R\ f-1(R\{0})?

There is a standard topological characterization of continuous functions that makes that almost trivial but I don't know if you can use that.
 
quasar987 said:
Or use the caracterisation of continuity by sequences. Let x_n be a sequence of element of K that converges in R to x. What can you say about h(x)?

I like this one the best. If you consider a limit point of K, you can construct a sequence in K that converges to that point (by simply invoking the definition of a limit point), and thus show from the continuity of h that the limit point must then also be in K. If any limit point of K is in K, then K is closed by definition.
 
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