Differences between revisions 4 and 5
Revision 4 as of 2005-08-22 23:19:08
Size: 587
Editor: yakko
Comment:
Revision 5 as of 2005-08-22 23:22:37
Size: 549
Editor: yakko
Comment:
Deletions are marked like this. Additions are marked like this.
Line 1: Line 1:
A set ''E'' is ''compact'' if and only if, for every family [[latex2($\{G_{ \alpha } \}_{\alpha \in A}$)]] of open sets such that [[latex2($E \subset \cup_{\alpha \in A}G_{\alpha}$)]]
Line 2: Line 3:
In general we simplify the definition to be: A compact set is a set which is closed (that is it contains its boundary points) and is bounded. Heine-Borel Theorom: A set [[latex2($E \subset \mathbb{R}$)]] is compact iff ''E'' is closed and bounded.
Line 6: Line 7:
A set ''E'' is ''compact'' if and only if, for every family [[latex2($\{G_{ \alpha } \}_{\alpha \in A}$)]] of open sets such that [[latex2($E \subset \cup_{\alpha \in A}G_{\alpha}$)]]

A set E is compact if and only if, for every family latex2($\{G_{ \alpha } \}_{\alpha \in A}$) of open sets such that latex2($E \subset \cup_{\alpha \in A}G_{\alpha}$)

Heine-Borel Theorom: A set latex2($E \subset \mathbb{R}$) is compact iff E is closed and bounded.

Example [2,8] is a compact set. The unit disk including the boundary is a compact set. (3,5] is not a compact set. Note that all of these examples are of sets that are uncountably infinite.

Introduction to Analysis 5th edition by Edward D. Gaughan

CompactSet (last edited 2020-01-26 17:51:19 by scot)