Dini's theorem

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Template:Short description In the mathematical field of analysis, Dini's theorem says that if a monotone sequence of continuous functions converges pointwise on a compact space and if the limit function is also continuous, then the convergence is uniform.[1]

Formal statement

If X is a compact topological space, and (fn)n is a monotonically increasing sequence (meaning fn(x)fn+1(x) for all n and xX) of continuous real-valued functions on X which converges pointwise to a continuous function f:X, then the convergence is uniform. The same conclusion holds if (fn)n is monotonically decreasing instead of increasing. The theorem is named after Ulisse Dini.[2]

This is one of the few situations in mathematics where pointwise convergence implies uniform convergence; the key is the greater control implied by the monotonicity. The limit function must be continuous, since a uniform limit of continuous functions is necessarily continuous. The continuity of the limit function cannot be inferred from the other hypothesis (consider xn in [0,1].)

Proof

Let ε>0 be given. For each n, let gn=ffn, and let En be the set of those xX such that gn(x)<ε. Each gn is continuous, and so each En is open (because each En is the preimage of the open set (,ε) under gn, a continuous function). Since (fn)n is monotonically increasing, (gn)n is monotonically decreasing, it follows that the sequence En is ascending (i.e. EnEn+1 for all n). Since (fn)n converges pointwise to f, it follows that the collection (En)n is an open cover of X. By compactness, there is a finite subcover, and since En are ascending the largest of these is a cover too. Thus we obtain that there is some positive integer N such that EN=X. That is, if n>N and x is a point in X, then |f(x)fn(x)|<ε, as desired.

Notes

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References

  1. Template:Harvnb. Template:Harvnb. Template:Harvnb. Template:Harvnb.
  2. According to Template:Harvnb, "[This theorem] is called Dini's theorem because Ulisse Dini (1845–1918) presented the original version of it in his book on the theory of functions of a real variable, published in Pisa in 1878".