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Countable or Uncountable…That is the question!
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REVIEW Countable Countably Infinite Uncountable
Empty set, finite set or countably infinite Countably Infinite The set is a non-empty, non-finite set, and there exists a bijection between N and the set. Uncountable Not countable
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HOMEWORK Solutions (1) Yes (2) Yes
The function f(n) = 2n is the desired bijection. (2) Yes The function f(n) = is the desired bijection. -n/ if n is even (n-1)/2 if n is odd
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Are the Rational Numbers Countable?
What do we know about rational numbers? - -Dense -N in Z in Q -Def of rational #
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VOTING Are the Rational Numbers countable?
(A) YES (B) NO (C) UNSURE
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What about the interval (0,1)
What do we know about this interval? -
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VOTING Reals in the interval (0,1) countable?
(A) YES (B) NO (C) UNSURE
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Let’s prove some things to attack these questions!
If A & B are disjoint countably infinite sets then AυB is countable.
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Proof Since A is countable there exists a bijection f : N A such that f (i) = ai Since B is countable there exists a bijection g : N B such that g (i) = bi Construct a function h (i) that orders the elements of A and B in the following way: a1, b1, a2, b2, a3, b3, . . .
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Our function h (i) h (i) = Why is h a bijection?
RECORD these observations on your worksheet
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Let’s prove some things to attack these questions!
If A & B are disjoint countably infinite sets then AυB is countable. If A is a countably infinite set and B is a subset of A then B is countable. DONE
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If A is a countably infinite set and B is a subset of A then B is countable.
Case I: If B is the empty set or a finite set then B is countable. Case II: B is an infinite set Since A is countable we can write the elements of A in the order a1, a2, a3, . . . If B is a subset of A then an infinite number of elements in the above sequence are elements of B. Thus the elements of B form a subsequence (c1, c2, c3,. . .) of the sequence a1, a2, a3, . . ., thus we may order the elements of B as b1, b2, b3, where bk = ck and the function f (i) = bi is a bijection between N and B
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Let’s prove some things to attack these questions!
If A & B are disjoint countably infinite sets then AυB is countable. If A is a countably infinite set and B is a subset of A then B is countable. DONE DONE
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How does (N x N) relate to Q+ υ {0} in size?
. 0,2 1,2 2,2 3,2 0,1 1,1 2,1 3,1 0,0 1,0 2,0 3,0
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Can you find an explicit formula for this mapping? CHALLENGE:
. 0,2 1,2 2,2 3,2 0,1 1,1 2,1 3,1 0,0 1,0 2,0 3,0 f(1) = (0,0) f(2) = (1,0) f(3) = (0,1) f(4) = (0,2) f(5) = (1,1) f(6) = (2,0) f(7) = (3,0) f(8) = (2,1) f(9) = (1,2) .
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Prove It! Now that we know that NxN is countable we can show that Q is countable. Use the facts we have deduced to show that Q is countable
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Proof that Q is countable
We know that Q+ υ {0} can be thought of as a subset of NxN Similarly Q- can be thought of as a subset of NxN Q+ υ {0} and Q- are countable because they are subsets of a countable set. We have shown that the union of two countable sets is also countable so (Q+ υ {0}) υ Q- = Q is countable
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Hey! Q is countable! Does this change your mind about the real numbers in the interval (0,1) being countable/uncountable? (A) YES (B) NO (C) UNSURE
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Cantor’s Diagonalization Argument
Cantor proved that the interval of real numbers (0,1) is… We start by noting that each real number in the interval (0,1) has a unique decimal representation of the form 0.d1d2d3d4… (where each di is a number from 0-9). And where decimals with period 1 cannot repeat with the number 9. UNCOUNTABLE!!!
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Proof (by contradiction)
Assume that f is a bijection from N (0,1). Then we may say: f(1) = A = 0.a1a2a3a4… f(2) = B = 0.b1b2b3b4… (Where A,B,C,D are distinct real numbers in (0,1)) f(3) = C = 0.c1c2c3c4… f(4) = D = 0.d1d2d3d4… . Choose a digit from 0 to 8 and we will call this a’1 such that a’1 ≠a1 Similarly choose a digit from 0 to 8 for b’1 such that b’2≠ b2 Similarly choose c’3≠ c3 and d’4≠ d Clearly f does not map a natural number to the real number 0.a’1b’2c’3d’4… So f is not a bijection. Contradiction!
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This proof show us that the interval (0,1) is actually a larger size of infinity than the natural numbers. HENCE (0,1) is a larger size of infinity than Q as well!
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Homework Question #1 Question #2
Today we identified two kinds of infinity: the size of the natural numbers and the size of the interval (0,1). Show that there is a bijection between the interval (0,1) and the set of real numbers. What does the existence of this bijection imply about these two sets? Question #2 Can you find a different size of infinity? That is a set that cannot be put into a bijection with N or the interval (0,1). To help you with this problem research the findings of Paul Cohen.
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DONE DONE DONE DONE DONE DONE DONE
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