Real Analysis- least upper bound and convergence

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the concept of epsilon in the context of convergence and its application to the least upper bound of a set in real analysis. Participants explore the definitions and implications of these concepts, particularly focusing on how epsilon relates to proving the existence of elements in a bounded set.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant expresses confusion about the role of epsilon in defining convergence and its application to the least upper bound problem.
  • Another participant questions how Cauchy sequences relate to the problem and seeks clarification on the nature of the set S.
  • A different participant clarifies that b-epsilon cannot be an upper bound and explains that there must exist an s in S such that b-epsilon <= s, reinforcing the definition of least upper bound.
  • One participant reiterates their initial confusion about epsilon and attempts to connect it to the concept of convergence, emphasizing the need for clarity in understanding how epsilon quantifies closeness to a limit.
  • A later reply suggests that assuming no such s exists leads to a contradiction, which could simplify the proof process.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express varying levels of understanding regarding the application of epsilon and the least upper bound. While some clarify concepts for others, there is no consensus on the best approach to relate these ideas, indicating ongoing uncertainty and exploration.

Contextual Notes

Some participants note the ambiguity in the definition of the set S and the implications of its elements on the least upper bound. The discussion does not resolve the relationship between Cauchy sequences and the problem at hand.

Who May Find This Useful

Readers interested in real analysis, particularly those grappling with the concepts of convergence, least upper bounds, and the role of epsilon in mathematical proofs.

Scousergirl
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I'm having a little difficulty understanding Epsilon in the definition of convergence. From what the book says it is any small real number greater than zero (as small as you can imagine?). Also, since I don't quite grasp what this epsilon is and how it helps define convergence, I am having difficulty applying it to the following problem:

Let b=Least upper bound of a set S (S is a subset of the real numbers) that is bounded and non empty. Then Given epsilon greater than 0, there exists an s in S such that (b-Epsilon)<= s <= b.

I started by proving that there exists an s in S, but I cannot figure out how to relate this all to epsilon.
 
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I understand the definitions of cauchy sequences and the cauchy criterion, but I don't see how I can relate them to this problem. I think what I am confused with is what kind of S we are dealing with here. FOr example, doesn't S={1*, b} satisfy these conditions but i don't see how i can use the cauchy sequence etc with the subset...
 
You know that b is the least upper bound. So b-1, for example, isn't an upper bound. Neither is b-1/2, or b-1/4, etc... b-epsilon will not be an upper bound for any choice of epsilon>0.

Now, since b-epsilon is not an upper bound, there must be an s in S such that b-epsilon<=s, or else b-epsilon would be a lesser upper bound.

The set S is arbitrary (well, it has to be nonempty if b is not to be -\infty). I don't know what you mean by 1* (it's the real number 1, defined in some way from the rational number 1?), but I assume you mean 1*<b. Then S has the the least upper bound b. That's right. But note that S will not always contain b. For example, the set {-1,-1/2,-1/3,-1/4,...} has the least upper bound 0, but 0 is not in the set.

Cauchy sequences don't enter into this problem, don't worry about them.

Does that answer your questions? :)
 
Last edited:
Scousergirl said:
I'm having a little difficulty understanding Epsilon in the definition of convergence. From what the book says it is any small real number greater than zero (as small as you can imagine?). Also, since I don't quite grasp what this epsilon is and how it helps define convergence, I am having difficulty applying it to the following problem:

Let b=Least upper bound of a set S (S is a subset of the real numbers) that is bounded and non empty. Then Given epsilon greater than 0, there exists an s in S such that (b-Epsilon)<= s <= b.

I started by proving that there exists an s in S, but I cannot figure out how to relate this all to epsilon.
The point of convergence of a sequence is that the numbers in the sequence get "closer and closer" to the limit. The purpose of \epsilon is to quantify, make clear, what "closer and closer" means. Saying "Given \epsilon> 0 , there exist N such that if n> N, then |an- L|< \epsilon" means that we can get as close as we please (< \epsilon) to L just by going far enough on the sequence (n> N).

Now, your problem here is only indirectly related to convergence. The assertion is "Given \epsilon&gt; 0, there exist some s in S such that b-\epsilon&lt; s \le b". Since b is an upper bound on S, there are no members of S larger than b: that gives you the "s \le b" part. Suppose there were NO members of s larger than b-\epsilon. What does that make b-\epsilon and how does that contradict the fact that b is the least upper bound?
 
Thank you so much this helps a lot. I guess that the proof would be easiest assuming there is no such s and then show that b-epsilon is thus greater than all s thus giving a contradiction to b being the least upper bound. This problem seems almost trivial now i know how to tackle it. :)
 

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