Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- To the student
- Chapter 1 Numbers, sets, and functions
- Chapter 2 The real numbers
- Chapter 3 Sequences
- Chapter 4 Open, closed, and compact sets
- Chapter 5 Continuity
- Chapter 6 Difierentiation
- Chapter 7 Integration
- Chapter 8 Sequences and series of functions
- Chapter 9 Metric spaces
- Chapter 10 The contraction principle
- Index
Chapter 2 - The real numbers
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- To the student
- Chapter 1 Numbers, sets, and functions
- Chapter 2 The real numbers
- Chapter 3 Sequences
- Chapter 4 Open, closed, and compact sets
- Chapter 5 Continuity
- Chapter 6 Difierentiation
- Chapter 7 Integration
- Chapter 8 Sequences and series of functions
- Chapter 9 Metric spaces
- Chapter 10 The contraction principle
- Index
Summary
The complete ordered field of real numbers
The real numbers form an ordered field ℝ containing the rationals with an additional property called completeness that the rationals do not satisfy. We need some preliminary definitions to be able to say what completeness means.
2.1. Definition. An upper bound for a subset A ⊂ ℝ is an element b ∈ ℝ such that a ≤ b for all a ∈ A. If A has an upper bound, then A is said to be bounded above.
A lower bound for a subset A ⊂ ℝ is an element b ∈ ℝ such that b ≤ a for all a ∈ A. If A has a lower bound, then A is said to be bounded below.
If A is bounded above and bounded below, then A is said to be bounded.
2.2. Example. Consider the interval [0, 1] = {x ∈ ℝ : 0 ≤ x ≤ 1}. It is bounded above, for example by the upper bound 1. The upper bounds for [0, 1] are precisely the numbers b with b ≥ 1. Thus 1 is the smallest upper bound for [0, 1], and it is of course also the largest element of [0, 1].
Now consider the interval (0, 1) = {x ∈ ℝ :0 < x < 1}, also bounded above, for example by 1. It has the same upper bounds as [0, 1]. Namely, if b ≥ 1 and x ∈ (0, 1), then x < 1 ≤ b, so b is an upper bound for (0, 1).
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- Lectures on Real Analysis , pp. 15 - 22Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2012