Real Analysis | The Supremum and Completeness of ℝ

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  • Опубліковано 3 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 146

  • @gustafa2170
    @gustafa2170 4 роки тому +170

    You're a legend, dude. I'm relearning this subject right now on my own.

    • @JasonOvalles
      @JasonOvalles 4 роки тому +9

      Ditto. I started going through this on my own about two weeks ago. These videos came in at just the right time. Best math teacher ever!

    • @kevinb.3541
      @kevinb.3541 4 роки тому +5

      @@JasonOvalles Hey, may I ask how is it going? And what textbook are you using for self-study? I'm also going through some introductory analysis (using Stephen Abbott's wonderful book).

    • @JasonOvalles
      @JasonOvalles 4 роки тому +4

      @@kevinb.3541 Using that same book. It's going really slowly, but I don't mind. I'm taking my time to make sure I feel comfortable with each section before moving on.

    • @tomatrix7525
      @tomatrix7525 3 роки тому +1

      @@JasonOvalles was thinking of picking up that book, have you finished it by now? Any thoughts or recommendations would be appreciated, thanks

    • @JasonOvalles
      @JasonOvalles 3 роки тому +2

      @@tomatrix7525 it's going very slowly. But not because of the book, I'm just pretty busy.
      The book itself is pretty well written. Professor Penn's videos help a lot. It's also such a popular book, that it's pretty easy to find solutions online to check my work.
      Here's what I usually do: one week, I'll read a section. During this week, I try to do the proofs myself. Often times, I can't and I'll go to the book or these videos for a hint. Or two. Or three. The next week, I'll do some of the exercises in that section. I choose the exercises based on what I can find solutions for. That way, if I'm stuck I can get hints and at the end, I can check my work. Then, if I feel comfortable, the next week, I move on to the next section.

  • @Blure
    @Blure 4 роки тому +30

    I'm learning real analysis on my own, your videos are incredibly helpful!

  • @GnarGnaw
    @GnarGnaw 4 роки тому +218

    Supremum, or sometimes we call it *soup*

  • @JohnWick-xd5zu
    @JohnWick-xd5zu 4 роки тому +32

    This channel is pure gold!!! Thank you prof. Penn

  • @andrewcoakley9028
    @andrewcoakley9028 4 роки тому +19

    Wow thank you! Currently taking a real analysis class and this was the clearest and most concise explanation that I've heard on this topic. Cheers.

    • @PunmasterSTP
      @PunmasterSTP 2 роки тому

      How did your real analysis class go?

  • @tomatrix7525
    @tomatrix7525 3 роки тому +4

    I am learning Real Analysis on my own and this is really good. Thanks so much because otherwise I’d be sort of astray with no clear path

  • @thobilesikakane6113
    @thobilesikakane6113 3 роки тому +3

    Very good detailed and to the point. Thank you so much. Saved me hours of non-productive studying.

  • @dozenazer1811
    @dozenazer1811 4 роки тому +4

    You’re just in time. I’ve just learned that thing on calculus. Thank you so much for the proof.

  • @vbcool83
    @vbcool83 4 роки тому +16

    Awesome!
    Please also cover Axiom of Choice and ZFC Set Theory if possible.

  • @iridium8562
    @iridium8562 4 роки тому +6

    this is amazing, this is by far the most underrated math channel on youtube, i am still pretty young but i am passionate about mathematics, and this channel has helped me alot, thank you so much for this.

  • @silversky216
    @silversky216 3 роки тому +1

    so blessed to find you at the start of my real analysis course

    • @PunmasterSTP
      @PunmasterSTP 2 роки тому

      I came across your comment and I'm just curious; how did your real analysis course go?

    • @silversky216
      @silversky216 2 роки тому +1

      @@PunmasterSTP Overall good. The examination was online so I managed to score really good. At the end of the day your course will highly depend on your Professor...So that's that.

    • @PunmasterSTP
      @PunmasterSTP 2 роки тому

      @@silversky216 Yeah I totally understand. I'm glad it went well!

  • @robson1566
    @robson1566 4 роки тому +2

    I've just found your channel, and man, it is a blessing! Keep up this amazing work!

  • @scipionedelferro
    @scipionedelferro 3 роки тому +1

    Wow!! You're great, best math channel on UA-cam! The very best was the last example, with the sequence of digits of pi. It shows that even the algebraic numbers are not complete, as pi is transcendental. And the completeness is an axiom of the Real numbers. But there are countable sets that are complete too. So it is not this axiom that requires the Reals to be uncountable. Must be other axioms...

  • @jaredvv86
    @jaredvv86 4 роки тому +1

    I would like more to this series

  • @schalkzijlstra878
    @schalkzijlstra878 3 роки тому

    Thanks man, all the way from South Africa

  • @criptonessy3522
    @criptonessy3522 4 роки тому +1

    Wow great video, I think I'll need to watch it a second time to fully digest it, but very clear, thank you!

  • @maxpercer7119
    @maxpercer7119 3 роки тому +8

    A useful theorem:
    For a non empty set S, given any epsilon greater than zero,
    if S is bounded above there exists an A in S such that sup(S) - e < A ≤ sup(S),
    and if S is bounded below there exists a B in S such that inf(S) ≤ B < inf(S) + e.

    • @GreatDG
      @GreatDG 8 днів тому +1

      This can be proved by contradiction

  • @jabronimargaretti7315
    @jabronimargaretti7315 3 роки тому +1

    god bless you man. thanks for doing these lectures!

  • @Anna-jy7cj
    @Anna-jy7cj 4 роки тому

    This is great, I've been looking for something like this and bam here you are .

  • @Behroozifyable
    @Behroozifyable 4 роки тому +5

    Fantastic, but at the very end you forgot to put a line through 'belongs to' sign as you say pie doesn't belong to rational numbers.

  • @PunmasterSTP
    @PunmasterSTP 2 роки тому

    Completeness? More like "You need this"...if you're taking a real analysis course! Thanks again for making and sharing all these wonderful videos.

  • @prattzencodes7221
    @prattzencodes7221 4 роки тому +2

    Great explanation of sup and inf! :D

  • @humblehmathgeo
    @humblehmathgeo 4 роки тому +1

    Thank you! Please make more videos on topics of Real Analysis!
    This video was really helpful!

    • @MichaelPennMath
      @MichaelPennMath  4 роки тому +7

      I am teaching Real Analysis this Fall and I will be making videos to support the whole course.

    • @humblehmathgeo
      @humblehmathgeo 4 роки тому +1

      @@MichaelPennMath Great!! Thank you!!

    • @RhynoBytes857
      @RhynoBytes857 2 роки тому

      @@MichaelPennMath What textbook does this course use?

  • @ellykalama9975
    @ellykalama9975 3 роки тому +1

    Great teacher 🔥🔥🔥🔥

  • @ghislainleonel7291
    @ghislainleonel7291 4 роки тому

    Much love from Cameroon 🇨🇲. Great content sir.

    • @newkid9807
      @newkid9807 4 роки тому

      Ghislain Leonel how is it in Cameroon?

    • @directordissy2858
      @directordissy2858 4 роки тому

      @@newkid9807 most likely civil war

  • @pureroseangemuse7910
    @pureroseangemuse7910 2 роки тому

    This really help me understand!

  • @GusTheWolfgang
    @GusTheWolfgang 4 роки тому +1

    loved the video. Keep doing a great job!

  • @anggalol
    @anggalol 4 роки тому

    9:10 We can choose a = (s + s - Ɛ)/2 = (2s - Ɛ)/2

  • @punditgi
    @punditgi 3 роки тому +2

    Will we see a follow up video on the point set topology of the real number line now? Sure hope so!

  • @fareehaO2
    @fareehaO2 Рік тому

    Amazing lecture as always..
    V.helpful👏

  • @luciuskhor554
    @luciuskhor554 4 роки тому +1

    Love your video!!! Keep doing it!

  • @MohitRaj-1712
    @MohitRaj-1712 4 роки тому +1

    Really good video.

  • @natasharomanova8119
    @natasharomanova8119 4 роки тому +2

    Man, where was this when I took real analysis?!

  • @Mr_Academic98
    @Mr_Academic98 4 роки тому

    Studied this in first year real analysis Polytech yaounde. Really interesting topic.

  • @2kreskimatmy
    @2kreskimatmy 4 роки тому

    that epsilon replacement was kinda cool

  • @scp_at_iitb
    @scp_at_iitb 3 місяці тому

    I appreciate this video.
    Thank you

    • @Lakshya_Raj07
      @Lakshya_Raj07 3 місяці тому +1

      Sare IIT’s me same h kya MA 101 ka syllabus
      Btw IIT BHU

    • @scp_at_iitb
      @scp_at_iitb 3 місяці тому +1

      @@Lakshya_Raj07 Maybe. But humara Calculus course hai and it is MA 105 instead

  • @johanroypaul2816
    @johanroypaul2816 3 роки тому +2

    Dear Micheal,
    Thank you for this amazing video.
    I have two doubts
    1) Shouldn't the set builder form be written in a way to show its elements, therefore can we include the equality sign as x will never take value of √2 and thereby no situation of x^2 =2 arises ?
    2) can we say the second sequence has supremum as it cannot be clearly defined since the decimal points do not end and as pie is not a number(in the sense, it is not defined to the exact value with regard to decimal points)?

    • @cardinalityofaset4992
      @cardinalityofaset4992 2 роки тому

      1) The set notation he uses stems from a ZFC axiom called Axiom schema of specification which states that from any arbitrary set, you can choose a subset. The way we do it is that we write the squirly brakets, on the left we write elements of a set that we choose from, and on the right we specify property of those elements. This property ultimately tells which elements we think and so the new set is well defined. So if you wrote equality sign instead of inequality the set would be empty since there are no rational numbers whose square is equal to 2 (as Michael eplained).
      2) The second sequence must have supremum according to the axiom of completeness, since 4 is clearly an upper bound and it is not empty because 3 is element of the set of sequence values. However, the supremum is real. Now, there is nothing wrong if supremum of a set is a natural number, or rational number, but it is NOT guaranteed. In this case the supremum is pie, which btw is a number. It is an irrational number which means it is a real number that can be represented as an infinite decimal (number with infinitely many decimal points that never repeat)

    • @johanroypaul2816
      @johanroypaul2816 2 роки тому

      @@cardinalityofaset4992 Thank you for the reply.
      I wrote the first the qts wrong.
      1) My doubt was that shouldn't we write it as 'x^2 < 2' instead of 'x^2

    • @cardinalityofaset4992
      @cardinalityofaset4992 2 роки тому

      @@johanroypaul2816 No, x

    • @johanroypaul2816
      @johanroypaul2816 2 роки тому

      @@cardinalityofaset4992 Here , since x is an element of Q, x cannot be ✓2 , then why are we writing x^2

  • @biswarupsaha2495
    @biswarupsaha2495 4 роки тому +2

    Sir make more videos on Olympiad calliber questions

  • @ZainKhan-sm8gr
    @ZainKhan-sm8gr 3 роки тому

    Great stuff Michael! Just a mistake in the notation at the end. You wrote pi as the element of rational numbers (Q).

  • @ferozsoomro4072
    @ferozsoomro4072 Рік тому

    please suggest a textbook to follow along with these videos on real analysis

  • @debendragurung3033
    @debendragurung3033 4 роки тому

    The Lemma 8:10 looks kinda hairy and counterintuitive.
    If {U} are upper bounds of A , than by common sense , u≥a for ∀ a∈A, u∈U. That's neat.
    Now where it boggles me is the sup(A). That s is sup(A) if for every ε>0, ∃ a∈A, s.t s-ε

  • @sc0820
    @sc0820 Рік тому

    wo i love ur teaching

  • @forpublicstuff728
    @forpublicstuff728 2 роки тому

    Thank you so much =)

  • @maxpercer7119
    @maxpercer7119 4 роки тому

    5:40 you used the archimedian principle, so R must be an archimedian set ;o

  • @samisiddiqi5411
    @samisiddiqi5411 3 роки тому +2

    Teacher: Time for some Real Analysis
    Kid named Ysis: 😮

    • @jamesyeung3286
      @jamesyeung3286 3 роки тому +1

      Complex and functional AnalYsis must be interesting

  • @kennyrogers4685
    @kennyrogers4685 3 роки тому

    Can you make a video on the cut property of real numbers?

  • @stevenwilson5556
    @stevenwilson5556 3 роки тому

    thank you

  • @sarthakmotwani8597
    @sarthakmotwani8597 4 роки тому

    Finally got it❤

  • @jananraj6680
    @jananraj6680 4 роки тому

    What are the pre-requisite to follow this real analysis playlist?

  • @carlosjhr64
    @carlosjhr64 3 роки тому

    In all of these "Sup[aSet]=u", there's an implied "Universe".
    Where "aSet" is a subset of some "Universe" and "u" is an element in some "Universe", but
    not necessarily is "u" in "aSet".
    I mention this because I've seen what looks like "Sup[Real]=w", and
    I don't know in what "Universe" "w" is in.

  • @cuppajoeman8569
    @cuppajoeman8569 3 роки тому

    Note that he meant pi is not an element of the rationals at the end, but wrote the opposite.

  • @RhynoBytes857
    @RhynoBytes857 2 роки тому

    Does this course happen to follow a textbook?

  • @erikjuma2752
    @erikjuma2752 3 роки тому

    Good work

  • @duchengp2422
    @duchengp2422 3 роки тому

    do you have some tutorials for further real analysis like lebesgue integral?

  • @manique6
    @manique6 Рік тому

    How do you get zero down the column

  • @hugodiazroa
    @hugodiazroa 4 роки тому

    Thanks a lot

  • @beardedboulderer2609
    @beardedboulderer2609 4 роки тому

    Wouldn't it work to just let a=sup(A) then s-epsilon

  • @goodplacetostop2973
    @goodplacetostop2973 4 роки тому +1

    16:05

  • @SartajKhan-jg3nz
    @SartajKhan-jg3nz 4 роки тому

    14:45 I did not understand what you meant by 'If Q is our universe bcz the sqrt(2) is not in Q'. Does that mean that for a set to be complete, for all subsets A that member of S with upperbounds, the SUP(A) must also be a member of S?

    • @baljeetgurnasinghani6563
      @baljeetgurnasinghani6563 3 роки тому +2

      No it's not necessary. If this set was defined in R, we would have sqrt(2) as the sup. However, since this set is defined in Q, we can't use sqrt(2) since it's not in Q. But that leads to a problem: u don't have a sup for this set now
      If u consider a rational number r < sqrt(2), u can always find a number greater than r and less than sqrt(2).
      So, a rational number less than sqrt(2) can never be the sup.
      Similarly, if u consider a rational number r > sqrt(2) as sup, you can always find another rational number which is an upper bound and also less than r.
      Since the sup can't be greater than or less than sqrt(2), and there is no number in Q whose square is 2, it basically leads us to the conclusion that this set has no sup.
      sry if I over complicated the explanation

    • @SartajKhan-jg3nz
      @SartajKhan-jg3nz 3 роки тому

      @@baljeetgurnasinghani6563 Actually no! I understood it completely! Thanks a bunch man for taking your time

    • @baljeetgurnasinghani6563
      @baljeetgurnasinghani6563 3 роки тому

      @@SartajKhan-jg3nz My pleasure 😊

  • @loucifabdessalam1522
    @loucifabdessalam1522 2 роки тому

    Awesome 👍

  • @joygodwinwilliamhenry406
    @joygodwinwilliamhenry406 4 роки тому

    Could you please add Indian math olympiad 2020 problem 2 in your list

  • @ollilui
    @ollilui 3 роки тому

    Perfect!!

  • @cediemacalisang7713
    @cediemacalisang7713 4 роки тому

    Hi, sorry I may have missed some basic idea, but isn't the sup(B) @7:50 equal to 1/2?

    • @JoaoVictor-gy3bk
      @JoaoVictor-gy3bk 4 роки тому

      Nop. Notice that the numbers on that first roll have the form n/(n+1), so they look like 2/3, 3/4, ..., 1999/2000 etc etc. They get closer and closer to 1.

  • @bactran7799
    @bactran7799 3 роки тому

    perfect

  • @isunrandila2124
    @isunrandila2124 3 роки тому

    u replaced s-u with epsilon since the both are higher than zero. Idk it's a little bit strange to me. Care to explain . TIA

  • @gnarlybonesful
    @gnarlybonesful 4 роки тому

    It's a little confusing how you worded the axiom of completeness. Is it right to say that both sets A have least upper bounds and supremums as opposed to saying their lub and supremum exist but are not in A? Or is it more correct to say that A has no least upper bound but has a supremum?

    • @michaelbillman4789
      @michaelbillman4789 3 роки тому

      @@angelmendez-rivera351 thanks for that explanation.

    • @mbrusyda9437
      @mbrusyda9437 2 роки тому

      @@angelmendez-rivera351 greetings! Sorry for replying after more than a year, but I was just recommended to this video.
      "every nonempty set A which is a subset of R, if it has an upper bound, then it has a supremum that is an element of A. This is true for finite and infinite sets alike."
      But what about the set A=[0,1)? If I understood correctly, sup(A)=1, but 1 is not in A?

  • @stefanoprodigo3443
    @stefanoprodigo3443 3 роки тому

    Thx

  • @ddk753
    @ddk753 2 роки тому

    Yo the amount of people self-learning real analysis in this comment section is just wonderful. Thought I was alone honestly.

  • @wkingston1248
    @wkingston1248 4 роки тому

    Doesn't that theorem and proof only work for a continuous set, how would it work for a discrete set. Do the concepts of continuity even apply to sets?

    • @kehrierg
      @kehrierg 4 роки тому

      i wondered the same. i think the condition for truth of the lemma that wasn't written down might be that the set A must be infinite (not contain finitely many elements). for instance with the A = {1/n : n a natural number} example, the lemma seems true, even though it's still true that A is a discrete set (each element of A has a neighborhood containing no other elements of A).

    • @kevinb.3541
      @kevinb.3541 4 роки тому

      @@kehrierg I think it works with a set that has finitely many elements. Let A be a set with n elements, and we claim that max{A} = sup A (max{A} is just the largest element of A which is well defined because A is finite, notice that it is in A). Thus to prove the equivalence we use the theorem; Let e > 0 be given, notice that max{A} > max{A} - e and since max{A} is in A, then the proof is done i.e max{A} = sup A.

  • @kirkjames
    @kirkjames 4 роки тому +1

    These are great, more analysis videos would be awesome.

  • @aaa.o.r7987
    @aaa.o.r7987 3 роки тому

    I can't get the last example 🥺

  • @_JoyBoy_
    @_JoyBoy_ 4 роки тому

    Anyone heard Nintendo switch sound effect? 10:14

  • @rishikaverma1925
    @rishikaverma1925 4 роки тому

    life savior

  • @Trynottoblink
    @Trynottoblink 4 роки тому

    Nice.

  • @mariamary1116
    @mariamary1116 3 роки тому

    What's the completeness property of lR?

    • @사기꾼진우야내가죽여
      @사기꾼진우야내가죽여 2 роки тому

      We say an order field F is complete if Every nonempty subset of F which is bounded above has the least upper bound.
      Since Q does not satisfy the axiom of completeness, this axiom is the characteristic that distinguishes R with Q.

  • @the_nuwarrior
    @the_nuwarrior 4 роки тому +1

    10/10

  • @terfatyokula1761
    @terfatyokula1761 3 роки тому

    What is the supremum of a bull set

  • @johnnewton326
    @johnnewton326 4 роки тому

    Lovely

  • @KiconcoJovile
    @KiconcoJovile 2 місяці тому

    Why are saying that inf(A) in example 1 is 0 yet 0 is not a natural number???

    • @donkeywithascarf2435
      @donkeywithascarf2435 Місяць тому

      I think it's the glb. 0 doesn't necessarily fall under the set of A, I believe, and A is a set of natural numbers in ex 1. And the set is 1/n, so the lub is 1, and 0 would be glb because it's below 1/n. I'm still learning, so I'm not sure, I'm just making wild guesses. 🥲

  • @artlifestyle6802
    @artlifestyle6802 3 роки тому

    Can you give subtitle Indonesia?

  • @makshudulislam7442
    @makshudulislam7442 4 роки тому

    Sir We want more IMO problem,,,pigeon hole problem,,,love from Bangladesh 🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩

  • @VaradMahashabde
    @VaradMahashabde 4 роки тому

    I didn't know this was a thing

  • @maxpercer7119
    @maxpercer7119 4 роки тому

    can you do a video one day on your workout routine. you look jacked ;o

  • @ebhojayejuliet9728
    @ebhojayejuliet9728 Рік тому

    How is the inf 0 it makes no sense 😭

    • @MohamedBenamer940
      @MohamedBenamer940 5 місяців тому

      Inf(A) = 0, Sup(A) = 1:
      Because: 1/n = 1 for n = 1,
      and lim(n->infinity) 1/n = 0
      And the sequence of numbers 1/n is strictly decreasing from 1 to 0 (0 not included, 0 not in A) as n goes from 1 to infinity.
      Inf(B) = 0, Sup(B) = 1:
      For a fixed m:
      lim(n->infinity) m/(n+m) = 0
      and the sequence of numbers
      m/(m+n) is strictly decreasing
      from m/(m+1) < 1 to 0 as n goes
      from 1 to infinity.
      For fixed n:
      lim(m->infinity) m/(n+m) = 1
      and the sequence of numbers
      m/(m+n) is strictly increasing
      from 1/(1+n) infinity) m/(m+n) = n/(2n)
      = 1/2

    • @MohamedBenamer940
      @MohamedBenamer940 5 місяців тому

      1 and 0 not in B also, because we get it from taking n or m approaching infinity, which is a limit not exactly equal to infinity (because it's not possible)
      و الله اعلم

  • @mengconghu9409
    @mengconghu9409 3 роки тому

    lit

  • @oraz.
    @oraz. 6 місяців тому

    He moves kind of fast

  • @tinacofactory
    @tinacofactory 4 місяці тому

    No

  • @firstnamelastname8684
    @firstnamelastname8684 4 роки тому

    I always pronounced it like ‘sup lol

  • @punditgi
    @punditgi 2 роки тому +1

    This cannot be true for a finite set.

  • @duckymomo7935
    @duckymomo7935 4 роки тому

    Dedekind cuts, nice

  • @duckymomo7935
    @duckymomo7935 4 роки тому

    Nice and beautiful
    Oh I meant the guy, the math is too

  • @GusTheWolfgang
    @GusTheWolfgang 4 роки тому

    gotta love the *soup*

  • @joshtaylor1568
    @joshtaylor1568 3 роки тому

    Man's fuckin' YOKED

  • @bakradil1998
    @bakradil1998 2 роки тому +1

    عراقي بجامعة بغداد مر من هنا ❤

    • @إسحاق-و2
      @إسحاق-و2 Рік тому

      السلام علیکم و رحمة الله وبركاته
      أهلا حياك الله
      شاهد قناة نواف يوسف محمد الزهراني ستجد فيها ما قد يساعدك.

  • @tribrunodang
    @tribrunodang 4 роки тому

    Guys that know math are hot hehe.

  • @jamesyeung3286
    @jamesyeung3286 3 роки тому

    soup

  • @asht750
    @asht750 3 роки тому

    Dude, take a breath. You speak too fast for instruction.

    • @tomatrix7525
      @tomatrix7525 3 роки тому

      Maybe he doesn’t suit your pace. That’s fine, find another video or something. The majority really find it great.