Continuity

From Citizendium
Revision as of 13:30, 13 November 2008 by imported>Richard Pinch (rearranged to develop from real variable to topological space, needs metric space too)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This article is a stub and thus not approved.
Main Article
Discussion
Related Articles  [?]
Bibliography  [?]
External Links  [?]
Citable Version  [?]
 
This editable Main Article is under development and subject to a disclaimer.

In mathematics, the notion of continuity of a function relates to the idea that the "value" of the function should not jump abruptly for any vanishingly "small" variation to its argument. Another way to think about a continuity of a function is that any "small" change in the argument of the function can only effect a correspondingly "small" change in the value of the function.

Formal definitions of continuity

We can develop the definition of continuity from the formalism which are usually taught in first year calculus courses to general topological spaces.

Functions of a real variable

The formalism defines limits and continuity for functions which map the set of real numbers to itself. To compare, we recall that at this level a function is said to be continuous at if (it is defined in a neighborhood of and) for any there exist such that

Simply stated, the limit

This definition of continuity extends directly to functions of a complex variable.

Topological space

A function f from a topological space to another topological space , usually written as , is said to be continuous at the point if for every open set containing the point y=f(x), there exists an open set containing x such that . Here . In a variation of this definition, instead of being open sets, and can be taken to be, respectively, a neighbourhood of x and a neighbourhood of .


Continuous function

If the function f is continuous at every point then it is said to be a continuous function. There is another important equivalent definition that does not deal with individual points but uses a 'global' approach. It may be convenient for topological considerations, but perhaps less so in classical analysis. A function is said to be continuous if for any open set (respectively, closed subset of Y ) the set is an open set in (respectively, a closed subset of X).