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INTRODUCTION TO ANALYSIS (I), FALL SEMESTER, 2015

October 21 , 2015
[R] for W. Rudins, [A] for T. M. Apostols, and [M] for M. Muresans.
EXERCISES OF CHAPTER 3 (I)
[R] Ex. 3.1, 3.3 3.5, 3.23
[R] The converse of [R] Theorem 3.6 (a) is also true. Prove it.

HOMEWORK 5
Due 17:00 pm of October 19, 2015
1. [A] Ex. 3.21 (open cover of a countable/uncountable set)
2. [A] Ex. 3.42 Though Q [0, 1] is a closed and bounded subset of Q, show that
Q [0, 1] is not compact.
3. [A] Ex. 4.37 (a metric space S is connected if, and only if, the only subsets of
S which are both open and closed in S are the empty set and S itself)
4. [R] Ex. 2.20 and [A] Ex. 4.39 (closures and interiors of connected sets) Solve
the question by giving proof(s) or counterexample(s).
5. [R] Ex. 2.21 (every convex subset of Rk is connected)

HOMEWORK 6
Due 17:00 pm of October 26, 2015
1. [R] Ex. 3.20 (Cauchy sequence with a convergent subsequence)
2. Let (an ) be a bounded real-valued sequence, and E R be the set of the
extended subsequential limits of (an ) as defined in [R] Definition 3.16. Denote
un = sup{ak : k n}. Clearly un is decreasing and hence lim un = U R
n

exists. Show that U satisfies the two properties stated in [R] Theorem 3.17:
(a) U E.
(b) For any > U there exists an N0 N such that an < when n N0 .
Hence conclude that U is precisely the upper limit of (an ) defined in [R] Definition 3.16 by the uniqueness property.
3. [A] Ex. 8.7 b) f).

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