I am trying to understand and prove the fundamental theorem of calculus and I ran into some confusio

Lexi Chandler

Lexi Chandler

Answered question

2022-05-10

I am trying to understand and prove the fundamental theorem of calculus and I ran into some confusion understanding the intermediate value theorem . several sources online claim that if a function f(x) is continuous on [a,b] let s be a number such that f ( a ) < s < f ( b ) then there exists a number k in the open interval (a,b) such that f(k)=s my question is why do we only assume the open interval shouldn't it also include the closed interval [a,b] and also why does s have to be less than both f ( a ) and f ( b )?

Answer & Explanation

Allyson Gonzalez

Allyson Gonzalez

Beginner2022-05-11Added 24 answers

The assertion “there is some k ( a , b ) such that f ( k ) = s” is stronger than the assertion “there is some k [ a , b ] such that f ( k ) = s”. So, why would we state a weaker statement when we can as easiy prove a stronger one.

And, if you have in mind the statement “if f ( a ) s f ( b ), then there is some k [ a , b ] such that f ( k ) = x”, then that statement is trivial if s = f ( a ) (just take k = a then) or if s = f ( b ) (just take k = b then). So, the non-trivial part is when f ( a ) < s < f ( b ).

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