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Study guide for the final exam
(MATH 6101-090, Fall 2016)
This guide will be continuously updated till the last day of classes.
- Definitions and axioms to remember:
Axiom for the Real Numbers (Axiom 2.2.4), intervals (Definition 2.3.6),
absolute value (Definition 2.3.8), generalized infinite decimal
fractions (Definition 2.8.4), base p representation of real
numbers (Definition 2.8.7), eventually repeating base p
representation (Definition 2.8.9), sequence (Definition
8.2.1), convergence of sequences (Definition 8.2.2), bounded sequence
(Definition 8.2.5), divergence to infinity (Definition 8.2.14),
(strictly) increasing and decreasing sequences (Definition 8.3.1),
subsequence (Definition 8.3.5), Cauchy sequence (Definition 8.3.10),
series (Definition 9.2.1), convergence and divergence of partial sums
(Definition 9.2.2), absolute and conditional convergence (Definition
9.4.1), Limits (Definition 3.2.1), bounded functions (Definition
3.2.5), operations on functions (Definition 3.2.9), one-sided limits
(Definition 3.2.15), continuity of a function (at a point) (Definition
3.3.1), uniform continuity (Definition 3.4.1), power series
(Definition 9.5.1).
- Statements you should be able to prove:
Archimedean property (Theorem 2.6.7), Heine-Borel
theorem (Theorem 2.6.14), generalized decimal fractions with integer
part zero (Lemma 2.8.3 and parts (1) through (3) of Lemma 2.8.5 ), limit of a sequence is unique (Lemma 8.2.3),
a convergent sequence is bounded (Lemma 8.2.6), multiplying a bounded
sequence with a sequence that goes to zero yields a sequence that goes
to zero (Lemma 8.2.7), product of convergent sequences is convergent
(part (4) of Theorem 8.2.9), inequalities and limits (Theorem 8.2.11),
Squeeze Theorem for sequences (Theorem 8.2.12), an increasing sequence
that is bounded from above is convergent, increasing unbounded
sequence diverges to infinity (Theorem 8.3.3), Monotone Convergence
Theorem (Corollary 8.3.4), subsequence of a convergent sequence
converges to the same limit (Lemma 8.3.7), Bolzano Weierstrass Theorem
(Theorem 8.3.9), convergent sequences are Cauchy sequences (Theorem
8.3.12), Cauchy sequences are bounded (Lemma 8.3.14), Cauchy
Completeness Theorem (Corollary 8.3.16), ratio of Fibonacci numbers
converges to the golden ratio (Example 8.4.10), Divergence Test
(Theorem 9.2.5), series of positive summands is convergent precisely
when it is bounded (Lemma 9.3.1), Comparison Test (Theorem 9.3.1),
alternating series test (Theorem 9.3.8), absolute convergent series
are convergent (Theorem 9.4.3), Uniqueness of a limit (Lemma 3.2.2), a
function that has a limit at c is bounded on a set obtained by
removing c from some neighborhood of it (Lemma 3.2.7), operations
preserving the existence of limits (Theorem 3.2.10), continuity in
terms of limits (Lemma 3.3.2), sign-preserving property of continuous
functions (Theorem 3.3.4), operations
preserving continuity (Theorem 3.3.5), continuous function on a closed
bounded interval is uniformly continuous (Theorem 3.4.4), uniformly
continuous function on a bounded domain is bounded (Theorem 3.4.5),
continuous function on a closed bounded interval is bounded (Corollary
3.4.6), Extreme Value Theorem (Theorem 3.5.1), Sequential
Characterization of Limits (Theorem 8.4.1).
- Statements you should be able to state (without
proof):
Basic properties of the absolute value (Lemma 2.3.9), unique
representation of natural numbers in base p (Theorem
2.8.2), real numbers with an eventually repeating base p
representation are exactly the rational numbers (Theorem 2.8.10, be
able to rewrite rational number in base 10 in eventually repeating
from and vice versa)
operations on convergent sequences (Theorem 8.2.9), every sequence
has a monotone subsequence (Lemma 8.3.8), if a Cauchy sequence has
a convergent subsequence than it is convergent (Lemma 8.3.13),
operations on convergent series (Theorem 9.2.6), Limit Comparison
Test (Theorem 9.3.4), Ratio Test (Theorem 9.4.4), outline example
of a conditionally convergent series whose limit may change after
rearranging (Example 9.4.11), rearranging an absolute convergent
series does not change the limit (Theorem 9.4.12), a series that is
only conditionally convergent may be rearranged to have any limit
(Theorem 8.4.15), Sign-preserving
property of limits (Theorem 3.2.4), the product of a bounded
function and of a function that goes to zero also goes to zero
(Lemma 3.2.8), composition and limits (Theorem 3.2.12),
inequalities and limits (Theorem 3.2.13), Squeeze Theorem (Theorem
3.2.14), limits in terms of one-sided limits (Lemma 3.2.17),
composing continuous functions preserves continuity (Theorem
3.3.8), Pasting Lemma (Lemma 3.3.10), uniform continuity implies
continuity (Lemma 3.4.2), Intermediate Value Theorem (Theorem
3.5.2), Sequential Characterization of Continuity (Corollary
8.4.2), results on the radius of convergence (Lemma 9.5.3 and
Theorem 9.5.4).
- What to expect
The exam will be closed book. The above guide is meant to help
with the mandatory part. For the optional part prepare as if it was
another midterm. The mandatory part will be as long as the midterm, the
optional part will have only about 5 questions. On the mandatory part,
Some questions may ask you to state and prove a theorem from the list
above, others may be like the exercises from your homework
assignments. Even if a statement is listed "without
proof" above, you must remember the proof of those parts of it
that were on a homework assignment! There may be questions
where you have to decide about an example whether it has certain
properties. (E.g. "Is this function continuous?")