locally bounded
Suppose that X is a topological space and Y a metric space.
Definition.
A set ℱ of functions f:X→Y is said to be locally bounded if for every x∈X, there exists a neighbourhood N of x such that ℱ is uniformly bounded on N.
In the special case of functions on the complex plane where it
is often used, the definition can be given as follows.
Definition.
A set ℱ of functions f:G⊂ℂ→ℂ is said to be locally bounded if for every a∈G there exist constants δ>0 and M>0 such that for all z∈G such that |z-a|<δ, |f(z)|<M for all f∈ℱ.
As an example we can look at the set ℱ of entire functions where
f(z)=z2+t for any t∈[0,1]. Obviously each such f is unbounded
itself, however if we take a small neighbourhood around any point we can
bound all f∈ℱ. Say on an open ball B(z0,1) we can show
by triangle inequality
that |f(z)|≤(|z0|+1)2+1
for all z∈B(z0,1). So this set of functions is locally bounded.
Another example would be say the set of all analytic functions from
some region G to the unit disc
. All those functions are bounded
by 1,
and so we have a uniform bound even over all of G.
As a counterexample suppose the we take the constant functions fn(z)=n for
all natural numbers n. While each of these functions is itself bounded,
we can never find a uniform bound for all such functions.
References
- 1 John B. Conway. . Springer-Verlag, New York, New York, 1978.
Title | locally bounded |
---|---|
Canonical name | LocallyBounded |
Date of creation | 2013-03-22 14:17:47 |
Last modified on | 2013-03-22 14:17:47 |
Owner | jirka (4157) |
Last modified by | jirka (4157) |
Numerical id | 9 |
Author | jirka (4157) |
Entry type | Definition |
Classification | msc 30A99 |
Classification | msc 54-00 |