M2: Analysis III Flashcards
Theorem
Continuous Functions are Integrable
Let f: [a, b] → ℝ be a continuous function.
Then, f is integrable.
Proof
(Continuous Functions are Integrable)
Let f: [a, b] → ℝ be a continuous function.
Then, f is integrable.
4 points
- f is uniformly continuous
- Take partition with mesh < δ and optimal majorant / minorant
- f attains its bounds on each interval by Boundedness Theorem
- I(Φ₊) - I(Φ₋) < ε (b - a)
Theorem
Bounded continuous functions are integrable
Let f: (a, b) → ℝ be a bounded continuous function.
Then, f is integrable.
Proof
(Bounded Continuous Functions are Integrable)
Let f: (a, b) → ℝ be a bounded continuous function.
Then, f is integrable.
4 points
- f is uniformly continuous on [a + ε, b - ε] and bounded by M
- Take partition x₀ = a, x₁ = a + ε, xₙ₋₁ = b - ε, xₙ = b and mesh < δ
- Take optimal majorant / minorant with value M on (x₀, x₁)
- f attains its bounds on each non-endpoint interval by the Boundedness Theorem
Proof
Suppose that f: [a, b] → ℝ is continuous. Then there is some c ∈ [a, b] such that ∫ₐᵇ f = (b - a) f(c).
3 points
- f attains its maximum M and minimum m by the Boundedness Theorem
- m ≤ (1 / (b - a)) ∫ₐᵇ f ≤ M
- Apply the Intermediate Value Theorem
Proof
Suppose that f: [a, b] → ℝ is continuous, and that w: [a, b] → ℝ is a nonnegative integrable function. Then there is some c ∈ [a, b] such that ∫ₐᵇ f w = f(c) ∫ₐᵇ w.
3 points
- f attains its maximum M and minimum m by the Boundedness Theorem
- m ≤ (∫ₐᵇ f w) / ∫ₐᵇ w ≤ M if ∫ₐᵇ w ≠ 0
- Apply Intermediate Value Theorem
Theorem
Monotone Functions are Integrable
Let f: [a, b] → ℝ be a monotone function.
Then, f is integrable.
Proof
(Monotone Functions are Integrable)
Let f: [a, b] → ℝ be a monotone function.
Then, f is integrable.
3 points
- Partition [a, b] into n equal parts
- Φ₊(x) = f(xᵢ) on (xᵢ₋₁, xᵢ)
- I(Φ₊) - I(Φ₋) = (1/n) (b - a) (f(b) - f(a))
Theorem
First Fundamental Theorem of Calculus
Suppose that f is integrable on (a, b). Define a new function F: [a, b] → ℝ by F(x) := ∫ₐˣ f.
Then F is continuous. Moreover, if f is continuous at c ∈ (a, b) then F is differentiable at c and F’(c) = f(c).
Proof
(First Fundamental Theorem of Calculus)
Suppose that f is integrable on (a, b). Define a new function F: [a, b] → ℝ by F(x) := ∫ₐˣ f.
Then F is continuous. Moreover, if f is continuous at c ∈ (a, b) then F is differentiable at c and F’(c) = f(c).
3 points
- |F(c + h) - F(c)| ≤ M h
- F is uniformly continuous taking δ = ε / M
- |F(c + h) - F(c) - h f(c)| ≤ ε h for any h ∈ (0, δ)
Theorem
Second Fundamental Theorem of Calculus
Suppose that F: [a, b] → ℝ is continuous on [a, b] and differentiable on (a, b). Suppose furthermore that its derivative F’ is integrable on (a, b).
Then ∫ₐᵇ F’ = F(b) - F(a).
Proof
(Second Fundamental Theorem of Calculus)
Suppose that F: [a, b] → ℝ is continuous on [a, b] and differentiable on (a, b). Suppose furthermore that its derivative F’ is integrable on (a, b).
Then ∫ₐᵇ F’ = F(b) - F(a).
2 points
- We show some Riemann sum Σ(F’; P; ξ) = F(b) - F(a)
- F’(ξᵢ) (xᵢ - xᵢ₋₁) = F(xᵢ) - F(xᵢ₋₁) for some ξᵢ ∈ (xᵢ₋₁, xᵢ) by the Mean Value Theorem
Proof
Suppose that fₙ: [a, b] → ℝ are integrable, and that fₙ → f uniformly on [a, b]. Then f is also integrable, and ∫ₐᵇ fₙ → ∫ₐᵇ f as n → ∞.
4 points
- |fₙ(x) - f(x)| ≤ ε
- I(Φ₊) - I(Φ₋) ≤ ε
- ψ₊ := Φ₊ + ε
- |∫ₐᵇ fₙ - ∫ₐᵇ f| ≤ sup{|fₙ(x) - f(x)|: x ∈ [a, b]} → 0