Limit
The notion of limit is an important idea in topology that applies to calculus, analysis, and other fields of mathematics. It took several centuries to articulate this idea and to make it rigorous.
Contents
[hide]Definition
Let and
be metric spaces, let
be a subspace of
, and, let
be a function from
to
. Let
be a limit point of
. (This means that in the metric space
, there are elements of
arbitrarily close to
.) Let
be an element of
. We say
(that is, the limit of
as
goes to
equals
) if for every positive real
there exists a positive real
for which
implies
for all
. Here
and
are the distance functions of
and
, respectively.
In analysis and calculus, usually and
are both either the set of reals
or complex numbers
. In this case, the distance functions
and
are both simply
. We then obtain the following definition commonly found in calculus textbooks:
- Let
be a function whose domain is a sub-interval of the real numbers and whose codomain is the set of reals. For a real number
,
- if for every $\espilon >0$ (Error compiling LaTeX. Unknown error_msg) there exists a
such that
However, most theorems on real limits apply to limits in general, with identical proofs.
Uniqueness
The notation would only be justifiable if
were unique. Fortunately, this is the case.
Indeed, suppose that is also
, and that
. Since
, we can pick a positive real
. But for any
,
so no
can simultaneously satisfy the conditions
a contradiction. Therefore limits are unique, as we wanted.
Existence of Limits
Limits do not always exist. For example does not exist, since, in fact, there exists no
for which there exists
satisfying the definition's conditions, since
grows arbitrarily large as
approaches 0. However, it is possible for
not to exist even when
is defined at
. For example, consider the Dirichlet function,
, defined to be 0 when
is irrational, and 1 when
is rational. Here,
does not exist for any value of
. Alternatively, limits can exist where a function is not defined, as for the function
defined to be 1, but only for nonzero reals. Here,
, since for
arbitrarily close to 0,
.
Intuitive Meaning
Many people new to calculus have difficulty understanding the limit's formal definition. We can instead offer the following informal explanation: a limit is the value to which the function grows close. For example,
because whenever
is close to 2, the function
grows close to 4.
In this case, the limit of the function is equal to the value of the function. That is, . This is because the function we chose was continuous at
.
However, not all functions have this property. For example, consider the function over the reals defined as follows:
Although the value of the function
at 0 is 1, the limit
is, in fact, zero. Intuitively, this is because no matter how close we get to zero, as long as we never actually reach zero,
will always be close to (in fact equal to) zero. Note that if our definition required only that
, the limit of this function would not exist.
Left and Right Hand Limits
In this section, we consider limits of functions whose domain and range are both subsets of the set of reals.
Left and right hand limits are the limits taken as a point is approached from the left and from the right, respectively. The left hand limit is denoted as , and the right hand limit is denoted as
.
If the left hand and right hand limits at a certain point differ, than the limit does not exist at that point. For example, if we consider the step function (the greatest integer function) , we have
, while
.
A limit exists if the left and right hand side limits exist, and are equal.
Sequential Criterion
Let , Let
be a cluster point of
, Let
and let Let
Then if for every sequence
that converges to
, the sequence
converges to
.
Other Properties
Let and
be real functions. Then:
given that
.