158 Chapter 3 11 Topology of the Real Number System
Corollary 3.3.9
(a) JR
(b) (a, b)
( c) (a, b]
(d) [a, b)
(e) (-oo,a)
(f) (-oo, a]
None of the following sets is compact (assuming a< b):
(g) (a, +oo)
(h) [a, +oo)
(i) U: n EN}
(j) N
(k) z
(1) Q
Proof. Exercise 3. •
Theorem 3.3.10 (Heine-Borel) Every closed, bounded interval of real num-
bers is compact.
Proof. Let I = [a, b], where a < b. Let U denote any open cover of I. We.
want to show that U has a finite subcover of I. We define the set
S = { x E I : some finite subcollection of U covers [a, x]}.
Then Sis nonempty since a ES. Moreover, Sis bounded since S ~ [a, b].
By completeness of JR, 3 u =sup S.
Claim #1: u ES.
Proof: Since a E S, a ::; u; and since bis an upper bound for S, u ::; b. Thus,
a ::; u ::; b. Thus, u is a member of some set V in U ; i.e., 3 V E U 3 u E V.
But V is open, so 3 c > 0 3
(u-c,u+c) ~ V.
By the €-criterion for supremum (Theorem i.6.6) 3 x E S 3 u - € < x ::; u.
Case 1 (x = u): Then u ES as desired.
Case 2 (x < u): Then (x, u] ~ (u - c , u + c) ~ V. Since x E S, the
definition of S says that some finite subcollection of U covers [a, x]. Adding V
to this subcollection gives us a finite subcollection of U that covers [a, u]. Thus,
u ES. (See Figure 3.13.)
In either case, u E S.
x
(! ) I
U-£ U U+t: b
Figure 3.13