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Homework Statement
Give an example of a totally bounded metric space which is not compact
Homework Equations
Def: A metric space X is totally bounded if for each e > 0, there exists a finite number of open balls of radius e that cover X
Def: A metric space X is compact if every open cover has a finite sub cover. I other words, X is compact if, whenever {Ualpha}alpha in A is an open cover of X, there are finitely many Ualpha's such that X is a subset of Ualpha1 u Ualpha2 u ...u Ualpham
The Attempt at a Solution
Suppose we had a metric space X that obeyed the first def. The for every e > 0, there's a finite set of open balls with radius e that covers X.
Question is, if we take the union of these balls, is that not a finite, open cover of X? I guess, I am not not exactly seeing what the difference is between compact and totally bounded. I think (0,1) with the standard Euclidean metric works (according to the back of the book, any bounded subset of Rn would work). But still not exactly seeing how it does.
In my class notes, I have it showing that (0,1) is contained in the U(1/ni, 1-1/ni) but is not contained in (1/N, 1-1/N) for any N, maybe I am not understanding my notes, but (1/N, 1-1/N) for any N sounds like one specific subset of U(1/ni, 1-1/ni), which is in a way a union of subsets of U(1/ni, 1-1/ni), but what about any other union of subsets of U(1/ni, 1-1/ni), namely U(1/ni, 1-1/ni) itself.