gwsinger
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I came across this proof and have a question about the bolded portion:
Consider the following objection to the bolded: In order for [itex]\mathcal{G}[/itex] to be an open cover of [itex]K[/itex] its sets must contain all of the points of [itex]K[/itex]. The sets of [itex]\mathcal{G}[/itex] are [itex]B_r(p)[/itex] for some fixed [itex]p[/itex], and so as [itex]r[/itex] gets larger and larger, it will allow some [itex]B_r(p)[/itex] to consume more and more points of [itex]K[/itex]. But how do we know that there is some finite [itex]r[/itex] that is large enough to consume ALL the points of [itex]K[/itex]? Isn't this essentially what we're trying to prove here to begin with?
Let [itex]X[/itex] be a metric space and let [itex]K\subset X[/itex] be compact. Consider the collection of open balls [itex]\mathcal{G}=\{ B_r(p)|r\in\mathbb{R}^+\}[/itex] for some (fixed) [itex]p\in X[/itex]. We see that [itex]\mathcal{G}[/itex] is an open cover of [itex]K[/itex]. As [itex]K[/itex] is compact, it has a finite subcover, say [itex]\{ B_{r_1}(p),B_{r_2}(p),\ldots,B_{r_n}(p)\}[/itex]. Let [itex]r_0=\sup\{ r_1,r_2,\ldots,r_n\}[/itex]. We see that [itex]K\subset B_{r_0}(p)[/itex], and hence, [itex]K[/itex] is bounded.
Consider the following objection to the bolded: In order for [itex]\mathcal{G}[/itex] to be an open cover of [itex]K[/itex] its sets must contain all of the points of [itex]K[/itex]. The sets of [itex]\mathcal{G}[/itex] are [itex]B_r(p)[/itex] for some fixed [itex]p[/itex], and so as [itex]r[/itex] gets larger and larger, it will allow some [itex]B_r(p)[/itex] to consume more and more points of [itex]K[/itex]. But how do we know that there is some finite [itex]r[/itex] that is large enough to consume ALL the points of [itex]K[/itex]? Isn't this essentially what we're trying to prove here to begin with?