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1. Numbers, Sets, and Sequences
Rational Zeros Theorem. For polynomials of the form cnxn + … + c0 = 0 , where each coefficient is an integer, then the only rational solutions have the form where c divides cn and d divides c0; rational root r must divide c0.
The maximum of a set S is the largest element in the set.
The minimum is the smallest element in the set.
The of S is the greatest lower bound.
The of S is the smallest upper bound.
S is bounded if s S, sM for some M
Completeness Axiom. If S is a nonempty bounded set in , then S and S exist.
Archimedean Property. If a, b 0, then n such that na b.
A sequence (sn) is a function mapping from to . It converges to s if > 0 there exists N such that N > n |(sn)-s| <
In other words,
(sn) = s
Important limit theorems include:
(sn)(tn) = ((sn))((tn))
(sn)+(tn) = ((sn)) + ((tn))
() = 0 for p > 0
n(1/n) = 1
A subsequence (sn(k)) of (sn) is a sequence that is a subset of the elements in the original sequence with relative order preserved.
Bolzano-Weierstrass Theorem. Every bounded sequence has a convergent subsequence, having some subsequential limit.
Given any (sn) and let S be the set of subsequential limits of (sn). Define:
(sn) = {(sn): n > N} = S
(sn) = {(sn): n > N} = S
|sn+1| / |sn| |sn|^(1/n) |sn|^(1/n) |sn+1| / |sn|
2. Topology
Metric Space: A set S with a metric, distance function d. For any x,y,z S
(1) d(x,y) > 0 if x y, d(x,x) = 0
(2) d(x,y) = d(y,x)
(3) d(x,z) d(x,y) + d(y,z)
Important* A metric is only valid if it outputs a real number for any inputs, ie. d(x,y) = is not valid.
A limit point p of a set S is such that for some radius ball around p, there exists an element q p such that q S. Note that limit points may or may not lie in the set.
A set S is open if for every point p in S is interior in S. Think open ball of radius in S centered at p.
A set S is closed if every limit point of S is a point in S.
A set S is perfect if it is closed and every interior point is a limit point.
A set S is dense in a metric space X if every point in X is either a limit point of S or in S itself.
The closure of a set S is the union of S and the set of its limit points. It can also be thought of as the intersection of all closed sets containing S.
An open cover for S is a collection of open sets that covers S.
A set S is compact if for all open covers {G} of S, there exists a finite subcover of {G} that covers S.
Heine-Borel Theorem. A subset E of n is compact if and only if it is closed and bounded.
A set S is connected if it cannot be written as disjoint union of nonempty, open sets
3. Series
A series converges if its partial sum sn = M for some M .
A series sn satisfies is Cauchy if for any > 0, there exists N such that n m > N | si| <
If sn converges, then sn = 0. (Note this is a one-way statement)
Comparison Test
If an converges and |bn| an n, then bn converges.
If an = and |bn| an n, then bn = .
Ratio Test an of nonzero terms
(i) converges if |an+1 / an| < 1
(ii) diverges if |an+1 / an| > 1
(iii) else inconclusive test
Root Test Let = |an|(1/n). Then an
(i) converges if < 1
(ii) diverges if > 1
(iii) else inconclusive test
Alternating Series Theorem If an is monotonically decreasing and an = 0, then (-1)n an converges.
4. Continuity and Convergence
There are three main definitions for a continuous function :
(1) continuous at x if for each > 0, there exists > 0 such that |x-y| < where y domain(f) |f(x) - f(y)| <
(2) continuous at x if for all sequences (sn) in domain(f) that converge to x, f(sn) = f(x)
(3) Let be mapping between metric spaces X Y. is continuous if the preimage -1 of any open set in Y is open in X. Similarly if the preimage -1 of any closed set in Y is closed in X.
A function is uniformly continuous if for all x in domain(f), for each > 0, there exists > 0 such that |x-y| < where y domain(f) |f(x) - f(y)| < .
Generally, a continuous function sends a compact set to another compact set. In this case, is bounded, and and exists.
A continuous function acting on a compact set is uniformly continuous on this interval.
Cauchy relation: If is uniformly continuous on a set S and sn is a Cauchy sequence in S, then (sn) is a Cauchy sequence.
Generally, a continuous function sends connected set to another connected set.
Intermediate Value Theorem. Let be a continuous real function on interval [a,b]. Then for all y between f(a) and f(b), there exists at least one x (a,b) such that f(x) = y.
If a function is discontinuous at x, and both (x+) and (x-) exist, then is said to have discontinuity of the first kind at x, or simple discontinuity.
A function n converges to f pointwise if for each x in the domain, n(x) = f(x).
A function n converges to f uniformly if {|n - f|} = 0.
In other words, for any fixed > 0 there exists N such that n > N |n(x) - f(x)| < for all x in the domain. This is a stronger restraint than pointwise convergence, where we only cared about each x individually. (Compare with regular vs uniform continuity)