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Up: Year 1
Previous: MC145 Algebraic Structures and
MC146 Introductory Real Analysis
| Credits: 10 |
Convenor: Dr. M. Marletta |
Semester: 2 |
| Prerequisites: |
essential: MC144, MC145 |
|
| Assessment: |
Coursework and tests: 20% |
One and a half hour examination: 80% |
| Lectures: |
18 |
Classes: |
none |
| Tutorials: |
5 |
Private Study: |
52 |
| Labs: |
none |
Seminars: |
none |
| Project: |
none |
Other: |
none |
| Total: |
75 |
|
|
Explanation of Pre-requisites
This module continues the discussion of number systems from MC145; in
particular, familiarity with the rational numbers will be assumed. The module
will contain rigorous mathematical discussion of the central concepts and
so will draw on the notions of proof and logical argument introduced in MC144
and applied in MC145. Familiarity with the idea of a function, as introduced in
these previous modules, will also be important.
Course Description
This course will introduce students to the beginnings of Real Analysis, the
study of the mathematics of the continuous number line. For a variety of
reasons, it turns out that there are not enough rational numbers; for example,
as
is not a rational, the equation x2-2=0 has no solution in the
rational numbers, equivalently, there is no rational point at which the
graph of
the function y=x2-2 crosses the x-axis. To remedy this situation the real
numbers are invented, but that leads to questions such as `how do you actually
define the real numbers?', `how do you know when you have defined enough real
numbers?' and `how do the real numbers differ from the rational numbers?'
This module attempts to answer these questions.
Aims
This module aims to introduce the basic ideas of mathematical analysis and to
familiarise students with the elementary properties of the real numbers and
of the concepts of continuity, sequences and limits.
Objectives
To know the definitions of and understand the key concepts introduced in this
module.
To be able to understand, reproduce and apply the main results and proofs in
this module.
To understand the difference between the real and rational numbers.
To be able to solve routine problems on the continuity of functions, the
convergence of sequences, the existence of limits of functions and on the
differentiability of functions.
Transferable Skills
The ability to present arguments and solutions in a coherent and logical form.
Syllabus
Questions of the nature of the real numbers and how they differ from the
rationals. Motivation for the module from a discussion of the intermediate
value theorem as intuitively obvious but nevertheless failing for the
rationals.
Continuity via
,
language. Examples, with full proof, of
continuous and of non-continuous functions. Proof of continuity of sums,
products and composites of continuous functions; continuity of polynomial
functions.
Definition of supremum and examples. Proofs of basic properties of suprema.
Statement of the completion property of the reals. Proof of the intermediate
value theorem. Infima as `dual' ideas to those concerning suprema. Sketch
construction of the real numbers (Dedekind cuts).
Concept of a sequence and the notion of convergence to a limit. Examples. Proof
of results on sums, products and quotients of convergent sequences. Proof of
monotone convergence theorems. Applications to computations of limits
of sequences defined by rational polynomials and by inductive
formulæ. Second sketch construction of the real numbers (equivalence
classes of monotone increasing, bounded above sequences).
The limit of a function; continuity via limits. Proof of the equivalence
between
the limit definition of continuity and the
,
version.
Application to reproving results on sums and products of continuous functions
from the work on sequences. Examples (with proofs) of functions having or not
having limits at certain points.
Application of the idea of limit to rigorous definition of differentiablity.
Proof of differentiablity of polynomial functions, via that of sums, products
etc. Examples (with proofs) of functions differentiable or not
differentiable at certain points. Proof that differentiable implies
continuous.
Reading list
Recommended:
M. Spivak,
Calculus,
Benjamin Cummings.
Background:
T. M. Apostol,
Mathematical Analysis,
Addison-Wesley.
K. G. Binmore,
Mathematical Analysis,
Cambridge.
J. C. Burkill,
A First Course in Mathematical Analysis,
Cambridge.
M. Hart,
An Guide to Analysis,
Macmillan.
J. B. Read,
An Introduction to Mathematical Analysis,
Oxford.
Details of Assessment
The final assessment of this module will consist of 20% coursework
and 80% from a one and a half hour examination during the Summer exam
period. The 20% coursework contribution will be determined by students'
solutions to coursework problems. The examination paper will contain
4 questions with full marks on the paper obtainable from 4 complete answers.
Next: MC147 Introductory Linear Algebra
Up: Year 1
Previous: MC145 Algebraic Structures and
S. J. Ambler
11/20/1999