Monday, 11 March 2013

real analysis - Graph of discontinuous linear function is dense




f:RR is a function such that for all x,y in R, f(x+y)=f(x)+f(y). If f is cont, then of course it has to be linear. But here f is NOT continous. Then show that the set {(x,f(x)):x in R} is dense in R2.


Answer



Let Γ be the graph.



If Γ is contained in a 1-dimensional subspace of R2, then it in fact coincides with that line. Indeed, the line will necessarily be L={(λ,λf(1)):λR}, and for all xR the line L contains exactly one element whose first coordinate is x, so that Γ=L. This is impossible, because it clearly implies that f is continuous.



We thus see that Γ contains two points of R2 which are linearly independent over R, call them u and v.



Since Γ is a Q-subvector space of R2, it contains the set {au+bv:a,bQ}, and it is obvious that this is dense in the plane.


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