Wednesday, 14 March 2018

real analysis - Proving uniform continuity of function on a half-open interval whose derivative has a limit at the boundary




I'm given a continuous function f:(a,b]R for which




  • f(x) exists on (a,b) and

  • limx+af(x) exists



and asked to prove that f is uniformly continuous.




I am having a bit of trouble with how to show this formally, though I understand the essence of the answer:




  • First off, the proof would be immediate if f was defined over the closed interval [a,b] since continuous functions are uniformly continuous on closed domains.


  • Second, because the limit of f(x) exists as x+a, f must be Lipschitz on its domain (f must be bounded since it is bounded near a and bounded everywhere to the right of a because the domain is closed in that direction).




This is all very well and good for an intuitive answer, but it seems a bit hand wavy. How do I do give a real ϵ,δ style argument here? Or is that overkill for this problem?



Thanks.



Answer



Since f has side limit at a, it is bounded on (a,c) for some c>a. So f is Lipschitz (and hence uniformly continuous) on (a,c]. On the other hand, f is also uniformly continuous on [c,b] by compactness.



Now you can show the following general fact: if a function is uniformly continuous on (a,c] and also on [c,b], then it is uniformly continuous on (a,b]. Using this fact and the above observations the proof is finished.






PS: This is assuming the side limit of f exists and is finite, otherwise there are counter-examples.



PPS: f may still be unbounded on (a,b], you can make counter-examples by adding countably-many disjoint tiny blobs with higher and higher derivatives.



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