|
|
|
|
generalized intermediate value theorem
|
(Theorem)
|
|
Proof. The sets $U=f(X)\cap(-\infty,y)$ and $V=f(X)\cap(y,\infty)$ are disjoint open subsets of $f(X)$ in the subspace topology, and they are both non-empty, as $f(x_1)$ is contained in one and $f(x_2)$ is contained in the other. If $y\notin f(X)$ , then $U\cup V$ constitutes a separation of the space $f(X)$ , contradicting the hypothesis that $f(X)$ is the continuous image of the connected space $X$ . Thus there must exist $x\in X$ such that $f(x)=y$ . 
This version of the intermediate value theorem reduces to the familiar one of real analysis when $X$ is taken to be a closed interval in $\mathbb{R}$ and $Y$ is taken to be $\mathbb{R}$ .
- 1
- J. Munkres, Topology, 2nd ed. Prentice Hall, 1975.
|
"generalized intermediate value theorem" is owned by azdbacks4234.
|
|
(view preamble | get metadata)
Cross-references: closed interval, intermediate value theorem, image, hypothesis, contained, subspace topology, open subsets, disjoint, order topology, totally ordered set, connected space, continuous function
There are 2 references to this entry.
This is version 5 of generalized intermediate value theorem, born on 2007-06-22, modified 2008-12-22.
Object id is 9639, canonical name is ProofOfGeneralizedIntermediateValueTheorem.
Accessed 1810 times total.
Classification:
| AMS MSC: | 26A06 (Real functions :: Functions of one variable :: One-variable calculus) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Pending Errata and Addenda
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|