Lec13 Mod
Lec13 Mod
M. K. Vemuri
Compactness (review)
Definition
By an open cover of a set E in a metric space X we S
mean a
collection {Gα } of open subsets of X such that E ⊆ α Gα .
Definition
A subset K of a metric space X is said to be compact if every
open cover of K contains a finite subcover.
More explicitly, the requirement is that given an open cover
{Gα }α∈I of K , there exist finitely many indices α1 , . . . , αn ∈ I such
that
K ⊆ Gα1 ∪ · · · ∪ Gαn .
Compactness (contd)
K ⊆ Gα1 ∪ · · · ∪ Gαn .
Theorem
Compact subsets of metric spaces are bounded.
Proof.
Let K be aScompact subset of the metric space X . Let p ∈ X .
Then X = r ∈(0,∞) Nr (p), so {Nr (p)}r ∈(0,∞) is an open cover of
K . Since K is compact, there exist r1 , · · · rk ∈ (0, ∞) such that
k
[
K⊆ Nrj .
j=1
Theorem
Compact subsets of metric spaces are closed.
Proof.
Let E be a subset of the metric space X , and assume that E is not
closed. We will construct an open cover of E which does not have
a finite subcover. Since E is not closed, there exists p ∈ E ′ \ E .
Let Gn = {x ∈ X | d(p, x) > 1/n}, n ∈ N. If x ∈ Gn , and
r = d(p, x) − 1/n, then r > 0, S and Nr (x) ⊆ Gn . Therefore each Gn
is open. Also, E ⊆ X \ {p} = n∈N Gn . Therefore {Gn }n∈N is an
open cover of E . We claim that it has no finite subcover. Indeed,
if M is a finite subset of N, and m = max M, then 1/m > 0 and
since p is aSlimit point of E , there exists q ∈ N1/m ∩ E . This
q∈ / Gm = n∈M Gn , so {Gn }n∈M is not a cover of E .
Compactness (contd)
Theorem
Let K be a compact subset of X . If F is a closed set in X and
F ⊆ K , then F is compact.
Proof.
Let Σ be an open cover of F . This means each element of Σ is an
open set and F ⊆ U∈Σ U. Since F is closed, F c is open. Let
S
Ω = Σ ∪ {F c }. Then Ω is an open cover of K . Since K is
compact, there is a finite subcollection Φ of Ω which covers K and
hence F . Let Ψ = Φ \ {F c }. Then Ψ ⊆ Σ and covers F .
Therefore F is compact.
Corollary
If F is closed and K is compact then F ∩ K is compact.
The Heine-Borel theorem in R
Theorem
Let c, d ∈ R. In the metric space R with the usual metric, the set
[c, d] is compact.
Proof. Suppose {Gα }α∈I is an open cover of [c, d]. Let
( )
[
A= x ∈ [c, d] ∃M ⊆ I , |M| < ∞, [c, x] ⊆ Gα .
α∈M
Theorem (Heine-Borel)
If K is a closed bounded set in the metric space R, then K is
compact.
Proof.
Since K is bounded, there exist q, M ∈ R such that K ⊆ NM (q).
Therefore K ⊆ [q − M, q + M]. Since K is closed and
[q − M, q + M] is compact, it follows that K is compact.
The Bolzano-Weierstrass theorem in R
Theorem
Let K be a compact subset of a metric space X . If E is an infinite
subset of K then E has a limit point in K .
Proof.
If no point of K were a limit point of E , then each q ∈ K would
have a neighborhood Vq which contains at most one point of E
(namely, q, if q ∈ E ). It is clear that no finite subcollection of
{Vq } can cover E ; and the same is true of K , since E ⊆ K . This
contradicts the compactness of K .
The Bolzano-Weierstrass theorem in R (contd)
Theorem
Every bounded infinite set of real numbers has a limit point.
Proof.
Let E be a bounded infinite subset of R. Then E ⊆ [c, d] for some
c, d ∈ R. Since [c, d] is compact, it follows that E has a limit
point in [c, d].