Let X=mathbb(R)^2. Given u(cdot , cdot) such that one of the level curves y=f(x) is discontinuous at x=t, construct (or show the existence of) two points p, l in X such that l is a limit point of both L(p) and U(p) but is contained in exactly one of the two

skystasvs

skystasvs

Answered question

2022-09-04

Let X = R 2 . Given u ( , ) such that one of the level curves y = f ( x ) is discontinuous at x = t , construct (or show the existence of) two points p , l X such that l is a limit point of both L ( p ) and U ( p ) but is contained in exactly one of the two

Answer & Explanation

scrapbymarieix

scrapbymarieix

Beginner2022-09-05Added 15 answers

Step 1
The fact that L(p) and U(p) are closed implies that the function f associated with c = u ( p ) is continuous. Indeed, if f is such that { ( x , y ) R 2 , u ( x , y ) = u ( p ) } = { ( x , f ( x ) ) , x R } , you can write : [the next equality is false]
L ( p ) = { ( x , y ) R 2 , y f ( x ) }
and L(p) is closed if and only if f is upper-semicontinuous. (This is a well-known property of upper-semicontinuous functions : see for instance here.)
Now, the same reasoning with U(p) implies that f is also lower-semicontinuous. Therefore, f is actually continuous. (I think this proves the claim you quote ?)
EDIT : Second attempt : If l Xis a limit point of both L(p) and U(p), since both sets are closed, you have l L ( p ) and l U ( p ) . Therefore (and this is actually independant of the continuity of level functions f) you cannot find an l as in your question.

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