Difference between revisions of "Cauchy criterion for convergence"

From Maths
Jump to: navigation, search
m
m
 
Line 1: Line 1:
 
==Iffy page==
 
==Iffy page==
 +
:: '''The purpose of this page is to show that on a complete space a [[Limit (sequence)|sequence converges]] {{M|\iff}} it is a [[Cauchy sequence]]'''
 +
 
The Cauchy criterion for convergence requires the space be complete. I encountered it with sequences on {{M|\mathbb{R} }} - there are of course other spaces! As such this page is being refactored.
 
The Cauchy criterion for convergence requires the space be complete. I encountered it with sequences on {{M|\mathbb{R} }} - there are of course other spaces! As such this page is being refactored.
  

Latest revision as of 15:26, 24 November 2015

Iffy page

The purpose of this page is to show that on a complete space a sequence converges [ilmath]\iff[/ilmath] it is a Cauchy sequence

The Cauchy criterion for convergence requires the space be complete. I encountered it with sequences on [ilmath]\mathbb{R} [/ilmath] - there are of course other spaces! As such this page is being refactored.

See Cauchy sequence for a definition

Page resumes

If a sequence converges, it is the same as saying it matches the Cauchy criterion for convergence.

Cauchy Sequence

A sequence [math](a_n)^\infty_{n=1}[/math] is Cauchy if:

[math]\forall\epsilon>0\exists N\in\mathbb{N}:n> m> N\implies d(a_m,a_n)<\epsilon[/math]

Theorem

A sequence converges if and only if it is Cauchy


TODO: proof, easy stuff