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Discontinuities of monotone functions

In the mathematical field of analysis, a well-known theorem describes the set of discontinuities of a monotone real-valued function of a real variable; all discontinuities of such a (monotone) function are necessarily jump discontinuities and there are at most countably many of them.

Usually, this theorem appears in literature without a name. It is called Froda's theorem in some recent works; in his 1929 dissertation, Alexandru Froda stated that the result was previously well-known and had provided his own elementary proof for the sake of convenience.[1] Prior work on discontinuities had already been discussed in the 1875 memoir of the French mathematician Jean Gaston Darboux.[2]

Definitions edit

Denote the limit from the left by

 
and denote the limit from the right by
 

If   and   exist and are finite then the difference   is called the jump[3] of   at  

Consider a real-valued function   of real variable   defined in a neighborhood of a point   If   is discontinuous at the point   then the discontinuity will be a removable discontinuity, or an essential discontinuity, or a jump discontinuity (also called a discontinuity of the first kind).[4] If the function is continuous at   then the jump at   is zero. Moreover, if   is not continuous at   the jump can be zero at   if  

Precise statement edit

Let   be a real-valued monotone function defined on an interval   Then the set of discontinuities of the first kind is at most countable.

One can prove[5][3] that all points of discontinuity of a monotone real-valued function defined on an interval are jump discontinuities and hence, by our definition, of the first kind. With this remark the theorem takes the stronger form:

Let   be a monotone function defined on an interval   Then the set of discontinuities is at most countable.

Proofs edit

This proof starts by proving the special case where the function's domain is a closed and bounded interval  [6][7] The proof of the general case follows from this special case.

Proof when the domain is closed and bounded edit

Two proofs of this special case are given.

Proof 1 edit

Let   be an interval and let   be a non-decreasing function (such as an increasing function). Then for any  

 
Let   and let   be   points inside   at which the jump of   is greater or equal to  :
 

For any     so that   Consequently,

 
and hence  

Since   we have that the number of points at which the jump is greater than   is finite (possibly even zero).

Define the following sets:

 
 

Each set   is finite or the empty set. The union   contains all points at which the jump is positive and hence contains all points of discontinuity. Since every   is at most countable, their union   is also at most countable.

If   is non-increasing (or decreasing) then the proof is similar. This completes the proof of the special case where the function's domain is a closed and bounded interval.  

Proof 2 edit

So let   is a monotone function and let   denote the set of all points   in the domain of   at which   is discontinuous (which is necessarily a jump discontinuity).

Because   has a jump discontinuity at     so there exists some rational number   that lies strictly in between   (specifically, if   then pick   so that   while if   then pick   so that   holds).

It will now be shown that if   are distinct, say with   then   If   then   implies   so that   If on the other hand   then   implies   so that   Either way,  

Thus every   is associated with a unique rational number (said differently, the map   defined by   is injective). Since   is countable, the same must be true of    

Proof of general case edit

Suppose that the domain of   (a monotone real-valued function) is equal to a union of countably many closed and bounded intervals; say its domain is   (no requirements are placed on these closed and bounded intervals[a]). It follows from the special case proved above that for every index   the restriction   of   to the interval   has at most countably many discontinuities; denote this (countable) set of discontinuities by   If   has a discontinuity at a point   in its domain then either   is equal to an endpoint of one of these intervals (that is,  ) or else there exists some index   such that   in which case   must be a point of discontinuity for   (that is,  ). Thus the set   of all points of at which   is discontinuous is a subset of   which is a countable set (because it is a union of countably many countable sets) so that its subset   must also be countable (because every subset of a countable set is countable).

In particular, because every interval (including open intervals and half open/closed intervals) of real numbers can be written as a countable union of closed and bounded intervals, it follows that any monotone real-valued function defined on an interval has at most countable many discontinuities.

To make this argument more concrete, suppose that the domain of   is an interval   that is not closed and bounded (and hence by Heine–Borel theorem not compact). Then the interval can be written as a countable union of closed and bounded intervals   with the property that any two consecutive intervals have an endpoint in common:   If   then   where   is a strictly decreasing sequence such that   In a similar way if   or if   In any interval   there are at most countable many points of discontinuity, and since a countable union of at most countable sets is at most countable, it follows that the set of all discontinuities is at most countable.  

Jump functions edit

Examples. Let x1 < x2 < x3 < ⋅⋅⋅ be a countable subset of the compact interval [a,b] and let μ1, μ2, μ3, ... be a positive sequence with finite sum. Set

 

where χA denotes the characteristic function of a compact interval A. Then f is a non-decreasing function on [a,b], which is continuous except for jump discontinuities at xn for n ≥ 1. In the case of finitely many jump discontinuities, f is a step function. The examples above are generalised step functions; they are very special cases of what are called jump functions or saltus-functions.[8][9]

More generally, the analysis of monotone functions has been studied by many mathematicians, starting from Abel, Jordan and Darboux. Following Riesz & Sz.-Nagy (1990), replacing a function by its negative if necessary, only the case of non-negative non-decreasing functions has to be considered. The domain [a,b] can be finite or have ∞ or −∞ as endpoints.

The main task is to construct monotone functions — generalising step functions — with discontinuities at a given denumerable set of points and with prescribed left and right discontinuities at each of these points. Let xn (n ≥ 1) lie in (a, b) and take λ1, λ2, λ3, ... and μ1, μ2, μ3, ... non-negative with finite sum and with λn + μn > 0 for each n. Define

  for   for  

Then the jump function, or saltus-function, defined by

 

is non-decreasing on [a, b] and is continuous except for jump discontinuities at xn for n ≥ 1.[10][11][12][13]

To prove this, note that sup |fn| = λn + μn, so that Σ fn converges uniformly to f. Passing to the limit, it follows that

  and  

if x is not one of the xn's.[10]

Conversely, by a differentiation theorem of Lebesgue, the jump function f is uniquely determined by the properties:[14] (1) being non-decreasing and non-positive; (2) having given jump data at its points of discontinuity xn; (3) satisfying the boundary condition f(a) = 0; and (4) having zero derivative almost everywhere.

Proof that a jump function has zero derivative almost everywhere.

Property (4) can be checked following Riesz & Sz.-Nagy (1990), Rubel (1963) and Komornik (2016). Without loss of generality, it can be assumed that f is a non-negative jump function defined on the compact [a,b], with discontinuities only in (a,b).

Note that an open set U of (a,b) is canonically the disjoint union of at most countably many open intervals Im; that allows the total length to be computed ℓ(U)= Σ ℓ(Im). Recall that a null set A is a subset such that, for any arbitrarily small ε' > 0, there is an open U containing A with ℓ(U) < ε'. A crucial property of length is that, if U and V are open in (a,b), then ℓ(U) + ℓ(V) = ℓ(UV) + ℓ(UV).[15] It implies immediately that the union of two null sets is null; and that a finite or countable set is null.[16][17]

Proposition 1. For c > 0 and a normalised non-negative jump function f, let Uc(f) be the set of points x such that

 

for some s, t with s < x < t. Then Uc(f) is open and has total length ℓ(Uc(f)) ≤ 4 c−1 (f(b) – f(a)).

Note that Uc(f) consists the points x where the slope of h is greater that c near x. By definition Uc(f) is an open subset of (a, b), so can be written as a disjoint union of at most countably many open intervals Ik = (ak, bk). Let Jk be an interval with closure in Ik and ℓ(Jk) = ℓ(Ik)/2. By compactness, there are finitely many open intervals of the form (s,t) covering the closure of Jk. On the other hand, it is elementary that, if three fixed bounded open intervals have a common point of intersection, then their union contains one of the three intervals: indeed just take the supremum and infimum points to identify the endpoints. As a result, the finite cover can be taken as adjacent open intervals (sk,1,tk,1), (sk,2,tk,2), ... only intersecting at consecutive intervals.[18] Hence

 

Finally sum both sides over k.[16][17]

Proposition 2. If f is a jump function, then f '(x) = 0 almost everywhere.

To prove this, define

 

a variant of the Dini derivative of f. It will suffice to prove that for any fixed c > 0, the Dini derivative satisfies Df(x) ≤ c almost everywhere, i.e. on a null set.

Choose ε > 0, arbitrarily small. Starting from the definition of the jump function f = Σ fn, write f = g + h with g = ΣnN fn and h = Σn>N fn where N ≥ 1. Thus g is a step function having only finitely many discontinuities at xn for nN and h is a non-negative jump function. It follows that Df = g' +Dh = Dh except at the N points of discontinuity of g. Choosing N sufficiently large so that Σn>N λn + μn < ε, it follows that h is a jump function such that h(b) − h(a) < ε and Dhc off an open set with length less than 4ε/c.

By construction Dfc off an open set with length less than 4ε/c. Now set ε' = 4ε/c — then ε' and c are arbitrarily small and Dfc off an open set of length less than ε'. Thus Dfc almost everywhere. Since c could be taken arbitrarily small, Df and hence also f ' must vanish almost everywhere.[16][17]

As explained in Riesz & Sz.-Nagy (1990), every non-decreasing non-negative function F can be decomposed uniquely as a sum of a jump function f and a continuous monotone function g: the jump function f is constructed by using the jump data of the original monotone function F and it is easy to check that g = Ff is continuous and monotone.[10]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ So for instance, these intervals need not be pairwise disjoint nor is it required that they intersect only at endpoints. It is even possible that   for all  

References edit

  1. ^ Froda, Alexandre (3 December 1929). Sur la distribution des propriétés de voisinage des functions de variables réelles (PDF) (Thesis). Paris: Hermann. JFM 55.0742.02.
  2. ^ Jean Gaston Darboux, Mémoire sur les fonctions discontinues, Annales Scientifiques de l'École Normale Supérieure, 2-ème série, t. IV, 1875, Chap VI.
  3. ^ a b Nicolescu, Dinculeanu & Marcus 1971, p. 213.
  4. ^ Rudin 1964, Def. 4.26, pp. 81–82.
  5. ^ Rudin 1964, Corollary, p. 83.
  6. ^ Apostol 1957, pp. 162–3.
  7. ^ Hobson 1907, p. 245.
  8. ^ Apostol 1957.
  9. ^ Riesz & Sz.-Nagy 1990.
  10. ^ a b c Riesz & Sz.-Nagy 1990, pp. 13–15
  11. ^ Saks 1937.
  12. ^ Natanson 1955.
  13. ^ Łojasiewicz 1988.
  14. ^ For more details, see
  15. ^ Burkill 1951, pp. 10−11.
  16. ^ a b c Rubel 1963
  17. ^ a b c Komornik 2016
  18. ^ This is a simple example of how Lebesgue covering dimension applies in one real dimension; see for example Edgar (2008).

Bibliography edit

  • Apostol, Tom M. (1957). Mathematical Analysis: a Modern Approach to Advanced Calculus. Addison-Wesley. pp. 162–163. MR 0087718.
  • Boas, Ralph P. Jr. (1961). "Differentiability of jump functions" (PDF). Colloq. Math. 8: 81–82. doi:10.4064/cm-8-1-81-82. MR 0126513.
  • Boas, Ralph P. Jr. (1996). "22. Monotonic functions". A Primer of Real Functions. Carus Mathematical Monographs. Vol. 13 (Fourth ed.). MAA. pp. 158–174. ISBN 978-1-61444-013-0. (subscription required)
  • Burkill, J. C. (1951). The Lebesgue integral. Cambridge Tracts in Mathematics and Mathematical Physics. Vol. 40. Cambridge University Press. MR 0045196.
  • Edgar, Gerald A. (2008). "Topological Dimension". Measure, topology, and fractal geometry. Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics (Second ed.). Springer-Verlag. pp. 85–114. ISBN 978-0-387-74748-4. MR 2356043.
  • Gelbaum, Bernard R.; Olmsted, John M. H. (1964), "18: A monotonic function whose points of discontinuity form an arbitrary countable (possibly dense) set", Counterexamples in Analysis, The Mathesis Series, San Francisco, London, Amsterdam: Holden-Day, p. 28, MR 0169961; reprinted by Dover, 2003
  • Hobson, Ernest W. (1907). The Theory of Functions of a Real Variable and their Fourier's Series. Cambridge University Press. p. 245.
  • Komornik, Vilmos (2016). "4. Monotone Functions". Lectures on functional analysis and the Lebesgue integral. Universitext. Springer-Verlag. pp. 151–164. ISBN 978-1-4471-6810-2. MR 3496354.
  • Lipiński, J. S. (1961). "Une simple démonstration du théorème sur la dérivée d'une fonction de sauts" (PDF). Colloq. Math. (in French). 8 (2): 251–255. doi:10.4064/cm-8-2-251-255. MR 0158036.
  • Łojasiewicz, Stanisław (1988). "1. Functions of bounded variation". An introduction to the theory of real functions. Translated by G. H. Lawden (Third ed.). Chichester: John Wiley & Sons. pp. 10–30. ISBN 0-471-91414-2. MR 0952856.
  • Natanson, Isidor P. (1955), "III. Functions of finite variation. The Stieltjes integral", Theory of functions of a real variable, vol. 1, translated by Leo F. Boron, New York: Frederick Ungar, pp. 204–206, MR 0067952
  • Nicolescu, M.; Dinculeanu, N.; Marcus, S. (1971), Analizǎ Matematică (in Romanian), vol. I (4th ed.), Bucharest: Editura Didactică şi Pedagogică, p. 783, MR 0352352
  • Olmsted, John M. H. (1959), Real Variables: An Introduction to the Theory of Functions, The Appleton-Century Mathematics Series, New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts, Exercise 29, p. 59, MR 0117304
  • Riesz, Frigyes; Sz.-Nagy, Béla (1990). "Saltus Functions". Functional analysis. Translated by Leo F. Boron. Dover Books. pp. 13–15. ISBN 0-486-66289-6. MR 1068530. Reprint of the 1955 original.
  • Saks, Stanisław (1937). "III. Functions of bounded variation and the Lebesgue-Stieltjes integral" (PDF). Theory of the integral. Monografie Matematyczne. Vol. VII. Translated by L. C. Young. New York: G. E. Stechert. pp. 96–98.
  • Rubel, Lee A. (1963). "Differentiability of monotonic functions" (PDF). Colloq. Math. 10 (2): 277–279. doi:10.4064/cm-10-2-277-279. MR 0154954.
  • Rudin, Walter (1964), Principles of Mathematical Analysis (2nd ed.), New York: McGraw-Hill, MR 0166310
  • von Neumann, John (1950). "IX. Monotonic Functions". Functional Operators. I. Measures and Integrals. Annals of Mathematics Studies. Vol. 21. Princeton University Press. pp. 63–82. doi:10.1515/9781400881895. ISBN 978-1-4008-8189-5. MR 0032011.
  • Young, William Henry; Young, Grace Chisholm (1911). "On the Existence of a Differential Coefficient". Proc. London Math. Soc. 2. 9 (1): 325–335. doi:10.1112/plms/s2-9.1.325.

discontinuities, monotone, functions, mathematical, field, analysis, well, known, theorem, describes, discontinuities, monotone, real, valued, function, real, variable, discontinuities, such, monotone, function, necessarily, jump, discontinuities, there, most,. In the mathematical field of analysis a well known theorem describes the set of discontinuities of a monotone real valued function of a real variable all discontinuities of such a monotone function are necessarily jump discontinuities and there are at most countably many of them Usually this theorem appears in literature without a name It is called Froda s theorem in some recent works in his 1929 dissertation Alexandru Froda stated that the result was previously well known and had provided his own elementary proof for the sake of convenience 1 Prior work on discontinuities had already been discussed in the 1875 memoir of the French mathematician Jean Gaston Darboux 2 Contents 1 Definitions 2 Precise statement 3 Proofs 3 1 Proof when the domain is closed and bounded 3 1 1 Proof 1 3 1 2 Proof 2 3 2 Proof of general case 4 Jump functions 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 BibliographyDefinitions editDenote the limit from the left byf x lim z x f z lim h gt 0 h 0 f x h displaystyle f left x right lim z nearrow x f z lim stackrel h to 0 h gt 0 f x h nbsp and denote the limit from the right by f x lim z x f z lim h gt 0 h 0 f x h displaystyle f left x right lim z searrow x f z lim stackrel h to 0 h gt 0 f x h nbsp If f x displaystyle f left x right nbsp and f x displaystyle f left x right nbsp exist and are finite then the difference f x f x displaystyle f left x right f left x right nbsp is called the jump 3 of f displaystyle f nbsp at x displaystyle x nbsp Consider a real valued function f displaystyle f nbsp of real variable x displaystyle x nbsp defined in a neighborhood of a point x displaystyle x nbsp If f displaystyle f nbsp is discontinuous at the point x displaystyle x nbsp then the discontinuity will be a removable discontinuity or an essential discontinuity or a jump discontinuity also called a discontinuity of the first kind 4 If the function is continuous at x displaystyle x nbsp then the jump at x displaystyle x nbsp is zero Moreover if f displaystyle f nbsp is not continuous at x displaystyle x nbsp the jump can be zero at x displaystyle x nbsp if f x f x f x displaystyle f left x right f left x right neq f x nbsp Precise statement editLet f displaystyle f nbsp be a real valued monotone function defined on an interval I displaystyle I nbsp Then the set of discontinuities of the first kind is at most countable One can prove 5 3 that all points of discontinuity of a monotone real valued function defined on an interval are jump discontinuities and hence by our definition of the first kind With this remark the theorem takes the stronger form Let f displaystyle f nbsp be a monotone function defined on an interval I displaystyle I nbsp Then the set of discontinuities is at most countable Proofs editThis proof starts by proving the special case where the function s domain is a closed and bounded interval a b displaystyle a b nbsp 6 7 The proof of the general case follows from this special case Proof when the domain is closed and bounded edit Two proofs of this special case are given Proof 1 edit Let I a b displaystyle I a b nbsp be an interval and let f I R displaystyle f I to mathbb R nbsp be a non decreasing function such as an increasing function Then for any a lt x lt b displaystyle a lt x lt b nbsp f a f a f x f x f b f b displaystyle f a leq f left a right leq f left x right leq f left x right leq f left b right leq f b nbsp Let a gt 0 displaystyle alpha gt 0 nbsp and let x 1 lt x 2 lt lt x n displaystyle x 1 lt x 2 lt cdots lt x n nbsp be n displaystyle n nbsp points inside I displaystyle I nbsp at which the jump of f displaystyle f nbsp is greater or equal to a displaystyle alpha nbsp f x i f x i a i 1 2 n displaystyle f left x i right f left x i right geq alpha i 1 2 ldots n nbsp For any i 1 2 n displaystyle i 1 2 ldots n nbsp f x i f x i 1 displaystyle f left x i right leq f left x i 1 right nbsp so that f x i 1 f x i 0 displaystyle f left x i 1 right f left x i right geq 0 nbsp Consequently f b f a f x n f x 1 i 1 n f x i f x i i 1 n 1 f x i 1 f x i i 1 n f x i f x i n a displaystyle begin alignedat 9 f b f a amp geq f left x n right f left x 1 right amp sum i 1 n left f left x i right f left x i right right sum i 1 n 1 left f left x i 1 right f left x i right right amp geq sum i 1 n left f left x i right f left x i right right amp geq n alpha end alignedat nbsp and hence n f b f a a displaystyle n leq frac f b f a alpha nbsp Since f b f a lt displaystyle f b f a lt infty nbsp we have that the number of points at which the jump is greater than a displaystyle alpha nbsp is finite possibly even zero Define the following sets S 1 x x I f x f x 1 displaystyle S 1 left x x in I f left x right f left x right geq 1 right nbsp S n x x I 1 n f x f x lt 1 n 1 n 2 displaystyle S n left x x in I frac 1 n leq f left x right f left x right lt frac 1 n 1 right n geq 2 nbsp Each set S n displaystyle S n nbsp is finite or the empty set The union S n 1 S n displaystyle S bigcup n 1 infty S n nbsp contains all points at which the jump is positive and hence contains all points of discontinuity Since every S i i 1 2 displaystyle S i i 1 2 ldots nbsp is at most countable their union S displaystyle S nbsp is also at most countable If f displaystyle f nbsp is non increasing or decreasing then the proof is similar This completes the proof of the special case where the function s domain is a closed and bounded interval displaystyle blacksquare nbsp Proof 2 edit So let f a b R displaystyle f a b to mathbb R nbsp is a monotone function and let D displaystyle D nbsp denote the set of all points d a b displaystyle d in a b nbsp in the domain of f displaystyle f nbsp at which f displaystyle f nbsp is discontinuous which is necessarily a jump discontinuity Because f displaystyle f nbsp has a jump discontinuity at d D displaystyle d in D nbsp f d f d displaystyle f left d right neq f left d right nbsp so there exists some rational number y d Q displaystyle y d in mathbb Q nbsp that lies strictly in between f d and f d displaystyle f left d right text and f left d right nbsp specifically if f displaystyle f nearrow nbsp then pick y d Q displaystyle y d in mathbb Q nbsp so that f d lt y d lt f d displaystyle f left d right lt y d lt f left d right nbsp while if f displaystyle f searrow nbsp then pick y d Q displaystyle y d in mathbb Q nbsp so that f d gt y d gt f d displaystyle f left d right gt y d gt f left d right nbsp holds It will now be shown that if d e D displaystyle d e in D nbsp are distinct say with d lt e displaystyle d lt e nbsp then y d y e displaystyle y d neq y e nbsp If f displaystyle f nearrow nbsp then d lt e displaystyle d lt e nbsp implies f d f e displaystyle f left d right leq f left e right nbsp so that y d lt f d f e lt y e displaystyle y d lt f left d right leq f left e right lt y e nbsp If on the other hand f displaystyle f searrow nbsp then d lt e displaystyle d lt e nbsp implies f d f e displaystyle f left d right geq f left e right nbsp so that y d gt f d f e gt y e displaystyle y d gt f left d right geq f left e right gt y e nbsp Either way y d y e displaystyle y d neq y e nbsp Thus every d D displaystyle d in D nbsp is associated with a unique rational number said differently the map D Q displaystyle D to mathbb Q nbsp defined by d y d displaystyle d mapsto y d nbsp is injective Since Q displaystyle mathbb Q nbsp is countable the same must be true of D displaystyle D nbsp displaystyle blacksquare nbsp Proof of general case edit Suppose that the domain of f displaystyle f nbsp a monotone real valued function is equal to a union of countably many closed and bounded intervals say its domain is n a n b n displaystyle bigcup n left a n b n right nbsp no requirements are placed on these closed and bounded intervals a It follows from the special case proved above that for every index n displaystyle n nbsp the restriction f a n b n a n b n R displaystyle f big vert left a n b n right left a n b n right to mathbb R nbsp of f displaystyle f nbsp to the interval a n b n displaystyle left a n b n right nbsp has at most countably many discontinuities denote this countable set of discontinuities by D n displaystyle D n nbsp If f displaystyle f nbsp has a discontinuity at a point x 0 n a n b n displaystyle x 0 in bigcup n left a n b n right nbsp in its domain then either x 0 displaystyle x 0 nbsp is equal to an endpoint of one of these intervals that is x 0 a 1 b 1 a 2 b 2 displaystyle x 0 in left a 1 b 1 a 2 b 2 ldots right nbsp or else there exists some index n displaystyle n nbsp such that a n lt x 0 lt b n displaystyle a n lt x 0 lt b n nbsp in which case x 0 displaystyle x 0 nbsp must be a point of discontinuity for f a n b n displaystyle f big vert left a n b n right nbsp that is x 0 D n displaystyle x 0 in D n nbsp Thus the set D displaystyle D nbsp of all points of at which f displaystyle f nbsp is discontinuous is a subset of a 1 b 1 a 2 b 2 n D n displaystyle left a 1 b 1 a 2 b 2 ldots right cup bigcup n D n nbsp which is a countable set because it is a union of countably many countable sets so that its subset D displaystyle D nbsp must also be countable because every subset of a countable set is countable In particular because every interval including open intervals and half open closed intervals of real numbers can be written as a countable union of closed and bounded intervals it follows that any monotone real valued function defined on an interval has at most countable many discontinuities To make this argument more concrete suppose that the domain of f displaystyle f nbsp is an interval I displaystyle I nbsp that is not closed and bounded and hence by Heine Borel theorem not compact Then the interval can be written as a countable union of closed and bounded intervals I n displaystyle I n nbsp with the property that any two consecutive intervals have an endpoint in common I n 1 I n displaystyle I cup n 1 infty I n nbsp If I a b with a displaystyle I a b text with a geq infty nbsp then I 1 a 1 b I 2 a 2 a 1 I n a n a n 1 displaystyle I 1 left alpha 1 b right I 2 left alpha 2 alpha 1 right ldots I n left alpha n alpha n 1 right ldots nbsp where a n n 1 displaystyle left alpha n right n 1 infty nbsp is a strictly decreasing sequence such that a n a displaystyle alpha n rightarrow a nbsp In a similar way if I a b with b displaystyle I a b text with b leq infty nbsp or if I a b with a lt b displaystyle I a b text with infty leq a lt b leq infty nbsp In any interval I n displaystyle I n nbsp there are at most countable many points of discontinuity and since a countable union of at most countable sets is at most countable it follows that the set of all discontinuities is at most countable displaystyle blacksquare nbsp Jump functions editExamples Let x 1 lt x 2 lt x 3 lt be a countable subset of the compact interval a b and let m1 m2 m3 be a positive sequence with finite sum Set f x n 1 m n x x n b x displaystyle f x sum n 1 infty mu n chi x n b x nbsp where xA denotes the characteristic function of a compact interval A Then f is a non decreasing function on a b which is continuous except for jump discontinuities at x n for n 1 In the case of finitely many jump discontinuities f is a step function The examples above are generalised step functions they are very special cases of what are called jump functions or saltus functions 8 9 More generally the analysis of monotone functions has been studied by many mathematicians starting from Abel Jordan and Darboux Following Riesz amp Sz Nagy 1990 replacing a function by its negative if necessary only the case of non negative non decreasing functions has to be considered The domain a b can be finite or have or as endpoints The main task is to construct monotone functions generalising step functions with discontinuities at a given denumerable set of points and with prescribed left and right discontinuities at each of these points Let xn n 1 lie in a b and take l1 l2 l3 and m1 m2 m3 non negative with finite sum and with ln mn gt 0 for each n Define f n x 0 displaystyle f n x 0 nbsp for x lt x n f n x n l n f n x l n m n displaystyle x lt x n f n x n lambda n f n x lambda n mu n nbsp for x gt x n displaystyle x gt x n nbsp Then the jump function or saltus function defined by f x n 1 f n x x n x l n x n lt x m n displaystyle f x sum n 1 infty f n x sum x n leq x lambda n sum x n lt x mu n nbsp is non decreasing on a b and is continuous except for jump discontinuities at xn for n 1 10 11 12 13 To prove this note that sup f n ln mn so that S f n converges uniformly to f Passing to the limit it follows that f x n f x n 0 l n f x n 0 f x n m n displaystyle f x n f x n 0 lambda n f x n 0 f x n mu n nbsp and f x 0 f x displaystyle f x pm 0 f x nbsp if x is not one of the x n s 10 Conversely by a differentiation theorem of Lebesgue the jump function f is uniquely determined by the properties 14 1 being non decreasing and non positive 2 having given jump data at its points of discontinuity x n 3 satisfying the boundary condition f a 0 and 4 having zero derivative almost everywhere Proof that a jump function has zero derivative almost everywhere Property 4 can be checked following Riesz amp Sz Nagy 1990 Rubel 1963 and Komornik 2016 Without loss of generality it can be assumed that f is a non negative jump function defined on the compact a b with discontinuities only in a b Note that an open set U of a b is canonically the disjoint union of at most countably many open intervals I m that allows the total length to be computed ℓ U S ℓ I m Recall that a null set A is a subset such that for any arbitrarily small e gt 0 there is an open U containing A with ℓ U lt e A crucial property of length is that if U and V are open in a b then ℓ U ℓ V ℓ U V ℓ U V 15 It implies immediately that the union of two null sets is null and that a finite or countable set is null 16 17 Proposition 1 For c gt 0 and a normalised non negative jump function f let U c f be the set of points x such that f t f s t s gt c displaystyle f t f s over t s gt c nbsp for some s t with s lt x lt t Then U c f is open and has total length ℓ U c f 4 c 1 f b f a Note that U c f consists the points x where the slope of h is greater that c near x By definition U c f is an open subset of a b so can be written as a disjoint union of at most countably many open intervals I k a k b k Let J k be an interval with closure in I k and ℓ J k ℓ I k 2 By compactness there are finitely many open intervals of the form s t covering the closure of J k On the other hand it is elementary that if three fixed bounded open intervals have a common point of intersection then their union contains one of the three intervals indeed just take the supremum and infimum points to identify the endpoints As a result the finite cover can be taken as adjacent open intervals s k 1 t k 1 s k 2 t k 2 only intersecting at consecutive intervals 18 Hence ℓ J k m t k m s k m m c 1 f t k m f s k m 2 c 1 f b k f a k displaystyle ell J k leq sum m t k m s k m leq sum m c 1 f t k m f s k m leq 2c 1 f b k f a k nbsp Finally sum both sides over k 16 17 Proposition 2 If f is a jump function then f x 0 almost everywhere To prove this define D f x lim sup s t x s lt x lt t f t f s t s displaystyle Df x limsup s t rightarrow x s lt x lt t f t f s over t s nbsp a variant of the Dini derivative of f It will suffice to prove that for any fixed c gt 0 the Dini derivative satisfies D f x c almost everywhere i e on a null set Choose e gt 0 arbitrarily small Starting from the definition of the jump function f S f n write f g h with g Sn N f n and h Sn gt N f n where N 1 Thus g is a step function having only finitely many discontinuities at x n for n N and h is a non negative jump function It follows that D f g D h D h except at the N points of discontinuity of g Choosing N sufficiently large so that Sn gt N ln mn lt e it follows that h is a jump function such that h b h a lt e and Dh c off an open set with length less than 4e c By construction Df c off an open set with length less than 4e c Now set e 4e c then e and c are arbitrarily small and Df c off an open set of length less than e Thus Df c almost everywhere Since c could be taken arbitrarily small Df and hence also f must vanish almost everywhere 16 17 As explained in Riesz amp Sz Nagy 1990 every non decreasing non negative function F can be decomposed uniquely as a sum of a jump function f and a continuous monotone function g the jump function f is constructed by using the jump data of the original monotone function F and it is easy to check that g F f is continuous and monotone 10 See also editContinuous function Mathematical function with no sudden changes Bounded variation Real function with finite total variation Monotone functionNotes edit So for instance these intervals need not be pairwise disjoint nor is it required that they intersect only at endpoints It is even possible that a n b n a n 1 b n 1 displaystyle left a n b n right subseteq left a n 1 b n 1 right nbsp for all n displaystyle n nbsp References edit Froda Alexandre 3 December 1929 Sur la distribution des proprietes de voisinage des functions de variables reelles PDF Thesis Paris Hermann JFM 55 0742 02 Jean Gaston Darboux Memoire sur les fonctions discontinues Annales Scientifiques de l Ecole Normale Superieure 2 eme serie t IV 1875 Chap VI a b Nicolescu Dinculeanu amp Marcus 1971 p 213 Rudin 1964 Def 4 26 pp 81 82 Rudin 1964 Corollary p 83 Apostol 1957 pp 162 3 Hobson 1907 p 245 Apostol 1957 Riesz amp Sz Nagy 1990 a b c Riesz amp Sz Nagy 1990 pp 13 15 Saks 1937 Natanson 1955 Lojasiewicz 1988 For more details see Riesz amp Sz Nagy 1990 Young amp Young 1911 von Neumann 1950 Boas 1961 Lipinski 1961 Rubel 1963 Komornik 2016 Burkill 1951 pp 10 11 a b c Rubel 1963 a b c Komornik 2016 This is a simple example of how Lebesgue covering dimension applies in one real dimension see for example Edgar 2008 Bibliography editApostol Tom M 1957 Mathematical Analysis a Modern Approach to Advanced Calculus Addison Wesley pp 162 163 MR 0087718 Boas Ralph P Jr 1961 Differentiability of jump functions PDF Colloq Math 8 81 82 doi 10 4064 cm 8 1 81 82 MR 0126513 Boas Ralph P Jr 1996 22 Monotonic functions A Primer of Real Functions Carus Mathematical Monographs Vol 13 Fourth ed MAA pp 158 174 ISBN 978 1 61444 013 0 subscription required Burkill J C 1951 The Lebesgue integral Cambridge Tracts in Mathematics and Mathematical Physics Vol 40 Cambridge University Press MR 0045196 Edgar Gerald A 2008 Topological Dimension Measure topology and fractal geometry Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics Second ed Springer Verlag pp 85 114 ISBN 978 0 387 74748 4 MR 2356043 Gelbaum Bernard R Olmsted John M H 1964 18 A monotonic function whose points of discontinuity form an arbitrary countable possibly dense set Counterexamples in Analysis The Mathesis Series San Francisco London Amsterdam Holden Day p 28 MR 0169961 reprinted by Dover 2003 Hobson Ernest W 1907 The Theory of Functions of a Real Variable and their Fourier s Series Cambridge University Press p 245 Komornik Vilmos 2016 4 Monotone Functions Lectures on functional analysis and the Lebesgue integral Universitext Springer Verlag pp 151 164 ISBN 978 1 4471 6810 2 MR 3496354 Lipinski J S 1961 Une simple demonstration du theoreme sur la derivee d une fonction de sauts PDF Colloq Math in French 8 2 251 255 doi 10 4064 cm 8 2 251 255 MR 0158036 Lojasiewicz Stanislaw 1988 1 Functions of bounded variation An introduction to the theory of real functions Translated by G H Lawden Third ed Chichester John Wiley amp Sons pp 10 30 ISBN 0 471 91414 2 MR 0952856 Natanson Isidor P 1955 III Functions of finite variation The Stieltjes integral Theory of functions of a real variable vol 1 translated by Leo F Boron New York Frederick Ungar pp 204 206 MR 0067952 Nicolescu M Dinculeanu N Marcus S 1971 Analizǎ Matematică in Romanian vol I 4th ed Bucharest Editura Didactică si Pedagogică p 783 MR 0352352 Olmsted John M H 1959 Real Variables An Introduction to the Theory of Functions The Appleton Century Mathematics Series New York Appleton Century Crofts Exercise 29 p 59 MR 0117304 Riesz Frigyes Sz Nagy Bela 1990 Saltus Functions Functional analysis Translated by Leo F Boron Dover Books pp 13 15 ISBN 0 486 66289 6 MR 1068530 Reprint of the 1955 original Saks Stanislaw 1937 III Functions of bounded variation and the Lebesgue Stieltjes integral PDF Theory of the integral Monografie Matematyczne Vol VII Translated by L C Young New York G E Stechert pp 96 98 Rubel Lee A 1963 Differentiability of monotonic functions PDF Colloq Math 10 2 277 279 doi 10 4064 cm 10 2 277 279 MR 0154954 Rudin Walter 1964 Principles of Mathematical Analysis 2nd ed New York McGraw Hill MR 0166310 von Neumann John 1950 IX Monotonic Functions Functional Operators I Measures and Integrals Annals of Mathematics Studies Vol 21 Princeton University Press pp 63 82 doi 10 1515 9781400881895 ISBN 978 1 4008 8189 5 MR 0032011 Young William Henry Young Grace Chisholm 1911 On the Existence of a Differential Coefficient Proc London Math Soc 2 9 1 325 335 doi 10 1112 plms s2 9 1 325 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Discontinuities of monotone functions amp oldid 1194321802, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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