Uniform continuity and antiderivative of x &#x21A6;<!-- ↦ --> e <mrow class="MJX-TeX

Brenden Tran

Brenden Tran

Answered question

2022-06-23

Uniform continuity and antiderivative of x e x 2
Show that the antiderivatives of x e x 2 are uniformly continuous in R .
So we know that for a function to be uniformly continuous there has to exists ξ s.t when | x y | < δ implies | f ( x ) f ( y ) | < ε.
But how do we go about this since we cannot really integrate e x 2 and we need the antiderivative?

Answer & Explanation

jmibanezla

jmibanezla

Beginner2022-06-24Added 17 answers

Step 1
Every function f defined and differentiable over an interval, with a bounded derivative, is uniformly continuous. Indeed, by the mean value theorem, if x y, we can say that
f ( x ) f ( y ) x y = f ( c ) with c between x and y. Therefore, if | f ( x ) | L for every x, we get
| f ( x ) f ( y ) | L | x y |
Step 2
Thus f is not only uniformly continuous, but also Lipschitzian, which is a stronger property.
Since 0 e x 2 1, we're done.
glycleWogry

glycleWogry

Beginner2022-06-25Added 8 answers

Step 1
Let F ( x ) = x e t 2 d t be the antiderivative of e x 2 ..
Without loss of generalities (indeed, the problem is symmetric if we exchange x and y), let's assume y > x and consider the following:
| F ( y ) F ( x ) | = | y e t 2 d t x e t 2 d t | = | x y e t 2 d t | = x y e t 2 d t .
Step 2
Since e t 2 1, then:
| F ( y ) F ( x ) | = x y e t 2 d t x y d t = y x .
Now, for any ε > 0, there exists a δ > 0, such that if we choose | y x | < δ = ε, then | F ( y ) F ( x ) | < ε ..
Hence, the antiderivative of e x 2 is uniformly continuous.

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