Let f be a function such that f : U &#x2286;<!-- ⊆ --> <mrow class="MJX-

antennense

antennense

Answered question

2022-07-09

Let f be a function such that f : U R n R . U is open in R n and path connected and f is continuous. Let x 1 , x 2 U. Proof that for all c [ f ( x 1 ) , f ( x 2 ) ] there exists an x U such that f ( x ) = c. I'm supposed to use one-dimensional intermediate value theorem to proof this. There is a hint stating that I should look out for a function φ : [ 0 , 1 ] U such that we use a "useful" composition of f and φ. I really don't know how to do this proof I would appreciate help a lot!

Answer & Explanation

Alexis Fields

Alexis Fields

Beginner2022-07-10Added 14 answers

You could let ϕ be a continuous function satisfying ϕ ( 0 ) = x 1 and ϕ ( 1 ) = x 2 . Its existence is guaranteed by path-connectedness. The composition f ϕ is continuous, maps [ 0 , 1 ] to R , and satisfies f ϕ ( 0 ) = f ( x 1 ) and f ϕ ( 1 ) = f ( x 2 ). There must exist t [ 0 , 1 ] with f ϕ ( t ) = c: what can you say about ϕ ( t )?
Sonia Ayers

Sonia Ayers

Beginner2022-07-11Added 3 answers

you need to find a point x U satisfying f ( x ) = c. So far there is a point t [ 0 , 1 ], guess i`m right

Do you have a similar question?

Recalculate according to your conditions!

Ask your question.
Get an expert answer.

Let our experts help you. Answer in as fast as 15 minutes.

Didn't find what you were looking for?