You are not logged in.
Pages: 1
Last edited by Stanley_Marsh (2007-04-09 09:18:56)
Numbers are the essence of the Universe
Offline
Here is what I dont understand, When he defined
That h is positive , then q is already an interior point , why does he need to make it so complicated.Or I miss something?Last edited by Stanley_Marsh (2007-04-09 09:29:59)
Numbers are the essence of the Universe
Offline
1. Just take an open ball in R² centered at some point x ∈ (a, b). No matter what the radius of the ball, it will always contain points not in (a, b). Therefore there exists no 2-ball contained entirely in (a, b), so (a, b) is not open in R². This is because the open ball in R² is (in a standard sense) a circle, while the open ball in R is just an open interval.
2. He needed to "make it more complicated" because he cannot just say that since h is positive, q is an interior point. Imagine h getting smaller and smaller so that q is closer and closer to being a boundary point, so that d(p, q) approaches r. He does the other steps to show that q is never a boundary point. How can you reason this? Well he shows that any point s in an open ball of radius h centered at q is contained in E. Since q is arbitrary, we see that for any point in E this holds. This is precisely the definition of openness; that at any point of the set E you can center an open ball B of some suitable radius such that the ball is entirely contained in the set; so B is a subset of E. The proof just shows that the suitable radius is this h.
Offline
1. Just take an open ball in R² centered at some point x ∈ (a, b). No matter what the radius of the ball, it will always contain points not in (a, b). Therefore there exists no 2-ball contained entirely in (a, b), so (a, b) is not open in R². This is because the open ball in R² is (in a standard sense) a circle, while the open ball in R is just an open interval.
Oddly enough, the phrase "open ball" only really makes sense in R³
But that reminds me of a joke. A mathematician and an engineer walk out of a conference, and the engineer remarks, "I find it so difficult picturing all this stuff in 11 dimensional space." to which the mathematician replies, "I just picture it in n-dimensional space, then set n equal to 11."
"In the real world, this would be a problem. But in mathematics, we can just define a place where this problem doesn't exist. So we'll go ahead and do that now..."
Offline
I guess it's just another one of those "contradictory mathematical terminologies." Even if we revised it to be called a "open (n-1)-sphere" it isn't necessarily (n-1)-spherical region in a general n-dimensional metric space, as the metric can certainly give it a different shape. Oh well, the term has stuck with me.
Offline
O, but that's very hard to come up with such prove.
Numbers are the essence of the Universe
Offline
Pages: 1