mariush
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Homework Statement
Let \left (X,d \right) be a metric space, and let \left\{ x_n \right\} and \left\{ y_n \right\} be sequences that converge to x and y. Let\left\{ z_n \right\} be a secuence defined as z_n = d(x_n, y_n). Show that \left\{ z_n \right\} is convergent with the limit d(x,y)
Homework Equations
The Attempt at a Solution
This is as far (short) as I've got.
We know that \left\{ x_n \right\} and \left\{ y_n \right\} are convergents with limits x and y.
By definition, \left\{ z_n \right\} is convergent to z if d(z_n, z)<\epsilon for any \epsilon when n>N, N>0.
That is to say d(z_n, z)<\epsilon = d( d(x_n, y_n) , d(x,y))<\epsilon when n>N.
I feel clueless on where to go from here. It seems resonabl that we could get d(x_n, y_n) < d(x,y) + \epsilon with a suitable n, since they are both convergent with the limits x and y. But then again, the whole problem seems intuitive, but i have no good idea about how to formalize this. Could anybody give me a hint or two?
Thanks! :)
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