Microcontinuous
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In
nonstandard analysis The history of calculus is fraught with philosophical debates about the meaning and logical validity of fluxions or infinitesimal numbers. The standard way to resolve these debates is to define the operations of calculus using epsilon–delta ...
, a discipline within
classical mathematics In the foundations of mathematics, classical mathematics refers generally to the mainstream approach to mathematics, which is based on classical logic and ZFC set theory. It stands in contrast to other types of mathematics such as constructive m ...
, microcontinuity (or ''S''-continuity) of an
internal function In mathematical logic, in particular in model theory and nonstandard analysis, an internal set is a set that is a member of a model. The concept of internal sets is a tool in formulating the transfer principle, which concerns the logical relation ...
''f'' at a point ''a'' is defined as follows: :for all ''x'' infinitely close to ''a'', the value ''f''(''x'') is infinitely close to ''f''(''a''). Here ''x'' runs through the domain of ''f''. In formulas, this can be expressed as follows: :if x\approx a then f(x)\approx f(a). For a function ''f'' defined on \mathbb, the definition can be expressed in terms of the
halo Halo, halos or haloes usually refer to: * Halo (optical phenomenon) * Halo (religious iconography), a ring of light around the image of a head HALO, halo, halos or haloes may also refer to: Arts and entertainment Video games * ''Halo'' (franch ...
as follows: ''f'' is microcontinuous at c\in\mathbb if and only if f(hal(c))\subseteq hal(f(c)), where the natural extension of ''f'' to the
hyperreals In mathematics, the system of hyperreal numbers is a way of treating infinite and infinitesimal (infinitely small but non-zero) quantities. The hyperreals, or nonstandard reals, *R, are an extension of the real numbers R that contains numbers ...
is still denoted ''f''. Alternatively, the property of microcontinuity at ''c'' can be expressed by stating that the composition \text\circ f is constant on the halo of ''c'', where "st" is the
standard part function In nonstandard analysis, the standard part function is a function from the limited (finite) hyperreal numbers to the real numbers. Briefly, the standard part function "rounds off" a finite hyperreal to the nearest real. It associates to every suc ...
.


History

The modern property of continuity of a function was first defined by Bolzano in 1817. However, Bolzano's work was not noticed by the larger mathematical community until its rediscovery in Heine in the 1860s. Meanwhile,
Cauchy Baron Augustin-Louis Cauchy (, ; ; 21 August 178923 May 1857) was a French mathematician, engineer, and physicist who made pioneering contributions to several branches of mathematics, including mathematical analysis and continuum mechanics. He w ...
's textbook
Cours d'Analyse ''Cours d'Analyse de l’École Royale Polytechnique; I.re Partie. Analyse algébrique'' is a seminal textbook in infinitesimal calculus published by Augustin-Louis Cauchy in 1821. The article follows the translation by Bradley and Sandifer in ...
defined continuity in 1821 using
infinitesimal In mathematics, an infinitesimal number is a quantity that is closer to zero than any standard real number, but that is not zero. The word ''infinitesimal'' comes from a 17th-century Modern Latin coinage ''infinitesimus'', which originally referr ...
s as above..


Continuity and uniform continuity

The property of microcontinuity is typically applied to the natural extension ''f*'' of a real function ''f''. Thus, ''f'' defined on a real interval ''I'' is continuous if and only if ''f*'' is microcontinuous at every point of ''I''. Meanwhile, ''f'' is
uniformly continuous In mathematics, a real function f of real numbers is said to be uniformly continuous if there is a positive real number \delta such that function values over any function domain interval of the size \delta are as close to each other as we want. In ...
on ''I'' if and only if ''f*'' is microcontinuous at every point (standard and nonstandard) of the natural extension ''I*'' of its domain ''I'' (see Davis, 1977, p. 96).


Example 1

The real function f(x)=\tfrac on the open interval (0,1) is not uniformly continuous because the natural extension ''f*'' of ''f'' fails to be microcontinuous at an
infinitesimal In mathematics, an infinitesimal number is a quantity that is closer to zero than any standard real number, but that is not zero. The word ''infinitesimal'' comes from a 17th-century Modern Latin coinage ''infinitesimus'', which originally referr ...
a>0. Indeed, for such an ''a'', the values ''a'' and ''2a'' are infinitely close, but the values of ''f*'', namely \tfrac and \tfrac are not infinitely close.


Example 2

The function f(x)=x^2 on \mathbb is not uniformly continuous because ''f*'' fails to be microcontinuous at an infinite point H\in \mathbb^*. Namely, setting e=\tfrac and ''K'' = ''H'' + ''e'', one easily sees that ''H'' and ''K'' are infinitely close but ''f''*(''H'') and ''f''*(''K'') are not infinitely close.


Uniform convergence

Uniform convergence In the mathematical field of analysis, uniform convergence is a mode of convergence of functions stronger than pointwise convergence. A sequence of functions (f_n) converges uniformly to a limiting function f on a set E if, given any arbitrarily s ...
similarly admits a simplified definition in a hyperreal setting. Thus, a sequence f_n converges to ''f'' uniformly if for all ''x'' in the domain of ''f*'' and all infinite ''n'', f_n^*(x) is infinitely close to f^*(x).


See also

*
Standard part function In nonstandard analysis, the standard part function is a function from the limited (finite) hyperreal numbers to the real numbers. Briefly, the standard part function "rounds off" a finite hyperreal to the nearest real. It associates to every suc ...


Bibliography

* Martin Davis (1977) Applied nonstandard analysis. Pure and Applied Mathematics. Wiley-Interscience ohn Wiley & Sons New York-London-Sydney. xii+181 pp. * Gordon, E. I.; Kusraev, A. G.; Kutateladze, S. S.: Infinitesimal analysis. Updated and revised translation of the 2001 Russian original. Translated by Kutateladze. Mathematics and its Applications, 544. Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, 2002.


References

{{Infinitesimals Nonstandard analysis