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Archimedean Property

The document discusses the Archimedean property of real numbers, which states that for any real number x, there exists a natural number n that is greater than x. This property is also known as the axiom of Archimedes. The document provides a proof of the Archimedean property and then presents three corollaries that follow from it, including that between any two real numbers x and y with x < y, there exists a rational number a such that x < a < y.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
748 views2 pages

Archimedean Property

The document discusses the Archimedean property of real numbers, which states that for any real number x, there exists a natural number n that is greater than x. This property is also known as the axiom of Archimedes. The document provides a proof of the Archimedean property and then presents three corollaries that follow from it, including that between any two real numbers x and y with x < y, there exists a rational number a such that x < a < y.
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Archimedean property https://planetmath.

org/archimedeanproperty

Archimedean property

Let 𝑥 be any real number. Then there exists a natural number 𝑛 such that 𝑛 > 𝑥.

This theorem is known as the Archimedean property of real numbers. It is also sometimes
called the axiom of Archimedes, although this name is doubly deceptive: it is neither an axiom
(it is rather a consequence of the least upper bound property) nor attributed to Archimedes (in
fact, Archimedes credits it to Eudoxus).

Proof. Let 𝑥 be a real number, and let 𝑆 = {𝑎 ∈ ℕ: 𝑎 ≤ 𝑥}. If 𝑆 is empty, let 𝑛 = 1; note that
𝑥 < 𝑛 (otherwise 1 ∈ 𝑆).

Assume 𝑆 is nonempty. Since 𝑆 has an upper bound, 𝑆 must have a least upper bound; call it
𝑏. Now consider 𝑏 − 1. Since 𝑏 is the least upper bound, 𝑏 − 1 cannot be an upper bound of 𝑆;
therefore, there exists some 𝑦 ∈ 𝑆 such that 𝑦 > 𝑏 − 1. Let 𝑛 = 𝑦 + 1; then 𝑛 > 𝑏. But 𝑦 is a
natural, so 𝑛 must also be a natural. Since 𝑛 > 𝑏, we know 𝑛 ∉ 𝑆; since 𝑛 ∉ 𝑆, we know 𝑛 > 𝑥.
Thus we have a natural greater than 𝑥. ∎

Corollary 1. If 𝑥 and 𝑦 are real numbers with 𝑥 > 0, there exists a natural 𝑛 such that 𝑛𝑥 > 𝑦.
Proof. Since 𝑥 and 𝑦 are reals, and 𝑥 ≠ 0, 𝑦/𝑥 is a real. By the Archimedean property, we can
choose an 𝑛 ∈ ℕ such that 𝑛 > 𝑦/𝑥. Then 𝑛𝑥 > 𝑦. ∎
Corollary 2. If 𝑤 is a real number greater than 0, there exists a natural 𝑛 such that
0 < 1/𝑛 < 𝑤.
Proof. Using Corollary 1, choose 𝑛 ∈ ℕ satisfying 𝑛𝑤 > 1. Then 0 < 1/𝑛 < 𝑤. ∎
Corollary 3. If 𝑥 and 𝑦 are real numbers with 𝑥 < 𝑦, there exists a rational number 𝑎 such that
𝑥 < 𝑎 < 𝑦.
Proof. First examine the case where 0 ≤ 𝑥. Using Corollary 2, find a natural 𝑛 satisfying
0 < 1/𝑛 < (𝑦 − 𝑥). Let 𝑆 = {𝑚 ∈ ℕ: 𝑚/𝑛 ≥ 𝑦}. By Corollary 1 𝑆 is non-empty, so let 𝑚 be
the least element of 𝑆 and let 𝑎 = (𝑚 − 1)/𝑛. Then 𝑎 < 𝑦. Furthermore, since 𝑦 ≤ 𝑚 /𝑛, we
have 𝑦 − 1/𝑛 < 𝑎; and 𝑥 < 𝑦 − 1/𝑛 < 𝑎. Thus 𝑎 satisfies 𝑥 < 𝑎 < 𝑦.

Now examine the case where 𝑥 < 0 < 𝑦. Take 𝑎 = 0.

Finally consider the case where 𝑥 < 𝑦 ≤ 0. Using the first case, let 𝑏 be a rational satisfying
−𝑦 < 𝑏 < −𝑥. Then let 𝑎 = −𝑏. ∎

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Archimedean property https://planetmath.org/archimedeanproperty

Title Archimedean property


Canonical name ArchimedeanProperty
Date of creation 2013-03-22 13:00:47
Last modified on 2013-03-22 13:00:47
Owner Daume (40)
Last modified by Daume (40)
Numerical id 9
Author Daume (40)
Entry type Theorem
Classification msc 12D99
Synonym axiom of Archimedes
Synonym Archimedean principle
Related topic ArchimedeanSemigroup
Related topic ExistenceOfSquareRootsOfNonNegativeRealNumbers
Generated on Fri Feb 9 16:38:52 2018 by L T XML

2 de 2 26/12/2018 12:52

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