0% found this document useful (0 votes)
13 views12 pages

Lec13 Mod

The document covers the concept of compactness in metric spaces, defining it as a subset where every open cover has a finite subcover. It includes theorems stating that compact subsets are bounded and closed, and discusses the Heine-Borel theorem, which asserts that closed and bounded sets in R are compact. Additionally, it presents the Bolzano-Weierstrass theorem, indicating that every infinite subset of a compact set has a limit point.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
13 views12 pages

Lec13 Mod

The document covers the concept of compactness in metric spaces, defining it as a subset where every open cover has a finite subcover. It includes theorems stating that compact subsets are bounded and closed, and discusses the Heine-Borel theorem, which asserts that closed and bounded sets in R are compact. Additionally, it presents the Bolzano-Weierstrass theorem, indicating that every infinite subset of a compact set has a limit point.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 12

Math 313: Lecture 13

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)

In order to prove that “K is compact”, one has to show that for


every open cover {Gα }α∈I of K , there exists a finite set
{α1 , . . . , αn }⊆ I such that

K ⊆ Gα1 ∪ · · · ∪ Gαn .

On the other hand, in order to prove that “E is not compact”, it


suffices to find one open cover {Gα }α∈I of E which does not have
a finite subcover.
Compactness (contd)

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

Put r = max{r1 , . . . , rk }. Then K ⊆ Nr (p), so K is bounded.


Compactness (contd)

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

We need to show that d ∈ A.


Since [c, c] = {c} ⊆ Gα for some α, the set A is not empty. Also
d is an upper bound of A. Therefore a = sup A exists. It is clear
that a ∈ [c, d].
The Heine-Borel theorem in R (contd)

First, we claim that a ∈ A. Indeed, there exists β ∈ I such that


a ∈ Gβ . Since Gβ is open, there exists r > 0 such that
(a − r , a + r ) = Nr (a) ⊆ Gβ . Since a − r is not an upper bound of
A, there exists x ∈ A such that a − r < x. Since S x ∈ A, there
exists M ⊆ I such that |M| < ∞ and [c, x] ⊆ α∈M Gα . Put
M ′ = M ∪ {β}. Then M ′ ⊆ I , |M ′ | < ∞ and
[
[c, a] ⊆ [c, x] ∪ (a − r , a + r ) ⊆ Gα .
α∈M ′

Therefore a ∈ A, and the claim is proved.


The Heine-Borel theorem in R (contd)

Next, we claim that a = d. Suppose not, i.e. S a < d. Since a ∈ A,


there is a finite set M ⊆ I such that [c, a] ⊆ α∈M Gα . In
particular, a ∈ Gβ for some β ∈ M. Since Gβ is open, there exists
r > 0 such that (a − r , a + r ) = Nr (a) ⊆ Gβ . Let
b = max{a + r /2, d}. Then b > a and
[
[0, b] ⊆ Gα ,
α∈M

so b ∈ A. This contradicts the fact that a = sup A, and proves the


claim. The two claims together imply that d ∈ A, and the theorem
is proved.
The Heine-Borel theorem in R (contd)

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].

You might also like