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Bounded function - Wikipedia

  • ️Thu Jun 13 1996

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A schematic illustration of a bounded function (red) and an unbounded one (blue). Intuitively, the graph of a bounded function stays within a horizontal band, while the graph of an unbounded function does not.

In mathematics, a function {\displaystyle f} defined on some set {\displaystyle X} with real or complex values is called bounded if the set of its values is bounded. In other words, there exists a real number {\displaystyle M} such that

{\displaystyle |f(x)|\leq M}

for all {\displaystyle x} in {\displaystyle X}.[1] A function that is not bounded is said to be unbounded.[citation needed]

If {\displaystyle f} is real-valued and {\displaystyle f(x)\leq A} for all {\displaystyle x} in {\displaystyle X}, then the function is said to be bounded (from) above by {\displaystyle A}. If {\displaystyle f(x)\geq B} for all {\displaystyle x} in {\displaystyle X}, then the function is said to be bounded (from) below by {\displaystyle B}. A real-valued function is bounded if and only if it is bounded from above and below.[1][additional citation(s) needed]

An important special case is a bounded sequence, where {\displaystyle X} is taken to be the set {\displaystyle \mathbb {N} } of natural numbers. Thus a sequence {\displaystyle f=(a_{0},a_{1},a_{2},\ldots )} is bounded if there exists a real number {\displaystyle M} such that

{\displaystyle |a_{n}|\leq M}

for every natural number {\displaystyle n}. The set of all bounded sequences forms the sequence space {\displaystyle l^{\infty }}.[citation needed]

The definition of boundedness can be generalized to functions {\displaystyle f:X\rightarrow Y} taking values in a more general space {\displaystyle Y} by requiring that the image {\displaystyle f(X)} is a bounded set in {\displaystyle Y}.[citation needed]

Weaker than boundedness is local boundedness. A family of bounded functions may be uniformly bounded.

A bounded operator {\displaystyle T:X\rightarrow Y} is not a bounded function in the sense of this page's definition (unless {\displaystyle T=0}), but has the weaker property of preserving boundedness; bounded sets {\displaystyle M\subseteq X} are mapped to bounded sets {\displaystyle T(M)\subseteq Y}. This definition can be extended to any function {\displaystyle f:X\rightarrow Y} if {\displaystyle X} and {\displaystyle Y} allow for the concept of a bounded set. Boundedness can also be determined by looking at a graph.[citation needed]

  1. ^ a b c Jeffrey, Alan (1996-06-13). Mathematics for Engineers and Scientists, 5th Edition. CRC Press. ISBN 978-0-412-62150-5.
  2. ^ "The Sine and Cosine Functions" (PDF). math.dartmouth.edu. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2 February 2013. Retrieved 1 September 2021.
  3. ^ Polyanin, Andrei D.; Chernoutsan, Alexei (2010-10-18). A Concise Handbook of Mathematics, Physics, and Engineering Sciences. CRC Press. ISBN 978-1-4398-0640-1.
  4. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Extreme Value Theorem". mathworld.wolfram.com. Retrieved 2021-09-01.
  5. ^ "Liouville theorems - Encyclopedia of Mathematics". encyclopediaofmath.org. Retrieved 2021-09-01.
  6. ^ a b Ghorpade, Sudhir R.; Limaye, Balmohan V. (2010-03-20). A Course in Multivariable Calculus and Analysis. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 56. ISBN 978-1-4419-1621-1.