The Real numbers
Arun Ram
Department of Mathematics and Statistics
University of Melbourne
Parkville, VIC 3010 Australia
aram@unimelb.edu.au
Last updates: 29 July 2014
The real numbers
The real numbers is the set
where
and
where addition and multiplication are given by
- the decimal place of
is the same as the decimal place of
- the decimal place of
is the same as the decimal place of
THESE OPERATIONS ARE REALLY MUCKED UP AND NEED TO BE FIXED.
Define a relation on by
Define the absolute value on
Define the distance on
Let .
The -ball at is
Let be a subset of . The set
is open if
| (1.1) |
-
The set with the operations of addition, multiplication, the order
and open sets as in
(1.1) is an ordered field and a topological field.
- The set is a ordered topological subfield of .
Let with
The subset is connected if and only if is an interval.
|
|
Proof. |
|
Assume is not an interval.
Let and with
Let
and
Then and are open subsets of and
So is not connected.
Assume is an interval.
To show: is connected.
Proof by contradiction.
Assume is not connected.
Let and be open subsets of such that
Then given by
is a continuous surjective function.
Let with
and
Switching and if necessary we may assume that
Construct sequences
and by
By induction, and and,
since is an interval,
so that is
defined and
Also,
so that
Since is complete and the sequence
is increasing and bounded by
exists in
Since is complete and the sequence
is decreasing and bounded by
exists in
Since
then
Let
Since
for then
Since is an interval,
Since is continuous,
This is a contradiction.
So is connected.
|
Notes and References
Decimal expansions (real numbers) are introduced to a child to read and write numerical values.
Long division (the Eucidean algorithm) is the algorithm that converts rational numbers to
real numbers. The integers is the free group on one generator,
the rationals is the field of fractions of ,
and the real numbers is a completion of
(a decimal expansion is no different than a Cauchy sequence of rational numbers).
Thus, all three number systems are universal objects (in the sense of category theory).
The proof of the theorem that connected sets in are intervals
follows the proof given in the course notes of J. Hyam Rubinstein for Metric and Hilbert spaces at the University of Melbourne.
This proof does not differ substantially from the proof in [Bou, Gen Top. Ch. IV §2 No. 5 Theorem 4] but is organised to be more self contained.
References
[BouTop]
N. Bourbaki,
General Topology, Chapter IV, Springer-Verlag, Berlin 1989.
MR?????
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