Thursday, 13 June 2013

calculus - Can the derivative of a function be such that it is not continuous?





My guess is that all derivatives ought to be continuous but perhaps there's some obscure example of a function for which this is not the case. Is there any theorem that answers this perhaps?


Answer



The standard counterexample is f(x)=x2sin(1x) for x0, with f(0)=0.



This function is everywhere differentiable, with f(x)=2xsin(1x)cos(1x) if x0 and f(0)=0. However, f is not continuous at zero because lim does not exist.



While f^{\prime} need not be continuous, it does satisfy the intermediate value property. This is known as Darboux's theorem.


No comments:

Post a Comment

real analysis - How to find lim_{hrightarrow 0}frac{sin(ha)}{h}

How to find \lim_{h\rightarrow 0}\frac{\sin(ha)}{h} without lhopital rule? I know when I use lhopital I easy get $$ \lim_{h\rightarrow 0}...