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Intermediate Value TheoremIf f is continuous on [a,b] and k is between f(a) and f(b) then there must be a number, c, in [a,b] such that f(c)=k The Intermediate Value Theorem can be stated in the following equivalent
form: This captures an intuitive property of continuous functions: if f(1) = 3 and f(2) = 5 then the value of f must be 4 somewhere between 1 and 2. It represents the idea that the graph of a continuous function can be drawn without lifting your pencil from the paper. Proof: First assume f(a) < k < f(b); the other case f(b) < k < f(a) is similar. Let S = {x in [a,b] : f(x) £ k}. Then S is non-empty (as a is in S) and bounded above by b. Hence by the "completeness property" of the reals, the least upper bound, or supremum c = sup S exists. We claim that f(c)=k. Suppose our claim is false. First, suppose that f(c)>k. Then
f(c)-k > 0, so there is a d > 0 such that
|f(x)-f(c)| < f(c)-k whenever 0 < |x-c| < d,
since f is continuous. Now suppose that f(c)<k. Again, by continuity, so there is a d
> 0 such that |f(x)-f(c)| < k-f(c) whenever 0 < |x-c| < d. We deduce that f(c)=k as stated. Now, Proceed to the Next Theorem in this Series: This proof was just the first in a series of proofs that take us up to the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus. The next proof in this series is the Bounded Value Theorem. Generalization The intermediate value theorem can be seen as a consequence of the following two statements from topology:
A particular case of the Intermediate Value Theorem is this: If f is continuous on an interval, and f is sometimes positive and sometimes negative then f must have a zero in the interval, which is known as the Weierstrass Intermediate Value Theorem, named for Karl Weierstrass (1815-1897), a German mathematician who is best known for his rigorous mathematical definitions of the Extreme Value Theorem and other results in calculus. Proceed to the next theorem in this series: The next proof in this series is the Bounded Value Theorem. Internet References
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