
Full text
... L. Bastien and others have stated that a prime of form (Sr + 1) , representable as (k + t ) cannot be congruent if (k + t) is not a quadratic residue of that prime. But no proof of this has been known to exist in the literature. The necessary proof will be developed in this paper. We first show that ...
... L. Bastien and others have stated that a prime of form (Sr + 1) , representable as (k + t ) cannot be congruent if (k + t) is not a quadratic residue of that prime. But no proof of this has been known to exist in the literature. The necessary proof will be developed in this paper. We first show that ...
2-5 - MrsBudde
... • Another law of deductive reasoning is the Law of Syllogism. • The Law of Syllogism allows you to state a conclusion from two true conditional statement when the conclusion of one statement is the hypothesis of the other statement. If p q is true and q r is true, then p r is true. Example: If ...
... • Another law of deductive reasoning is the Law of Syllogism. • The Law of Syllogism allows you to state a conclusion from two true conditional statement when the conclusion of one statement is the hypothesis of the other statement. If p q is true and q r is true, then p r is true. Example: If ...
CONTRA-CONTINUOUS FUNCTIONS AND STRONGLY S
... the a-sets, that is the sets A c X with A c Int Int A A function f" (X, 7-) (Y, or)is called acontinuous 15] if the inverse image of every open set in Y is an c-set in X. Sometimes a-sets are called a-open. In 1967 Levine introduced the notion of semi-open sets. A set A C (X, 7-) is called semi-open ...
... the a-sets, that is the sets A c X with A c Int Int A A function f" (X, 7-) (Y, or)is called acontinuous 15] if the inverse image of every open set in Y is an c-set in X. Sometimes a-sets are called a-open. In 1967 Levine introduced the notion of semi-open sets. A set A C (X, 7-) is called semi-open ...
PRELIM 5310 PRELIM (Topology) January 2012
... Justify all your steps rigorously. You may use any results that you know, unless the question asks you to prove essentially the same result. 1. Decide whether each of the following statements is correct. If yes, give a proof, otherwise, give a counterexample (without proof). Here X and Y are topolog ...
... Justify all your steps rigorously. You may use any results that you know, unless the question asks you to prove essentially the same result. 1. Decide whether each of the following statements is correct. If yes, give a proof, otherwise, give a counterexample (without proof). Here X and Y are topolog ...
Quasi-complete vector spaces
... for any F in the continuous linear dual of V . But although the vector I is certainly unique, why does it exist? Why is there a vector I in v actually satisfying this equation? In other words, we have defined the intetgral in the double dual of V , but why is it actually in V ? That’s the first ques ...
... for any F in the continuous linear dual of V . But although the vector I is certainly unique, why does it exist? Why is there a vector I in v actually satisfying this equation? In other words, we have defined the intetgral in the double dual of V , but why is it actually in V ? That’s the first ques ...
Brouwer fixed-point theorem

Brouwer's fixed-point theorem is a fixed-point theorem in topology, named after Luitzen Brouwer. It states that for any continuous function f mapping a compact convex set into itself there is a point x0 such that f(x0) = x0. The simplest forms of Brouwer's theorem are for continuous functions f from a closed interval I in the real numbers to itself or from a closed disk D to itself. A more general form than the latter is for continuous functions from a convex compact subset K of Euclidean space to itself.Among hundreds of fixed-point theorems, Brouwer's is particularly well known, due in part to its use across numerous fields of mathematics.In its original field, this result is one of the key theorems characterizing the topology of Euclidean spaces, along with the Jordan curve theorem, the hairy ball theorem and the Borsuk–Ulam theorem.This gives it a place among the fundamental theorems of topology. The theorem is also used for proving deep results about differential equations and is covered in most introductory courses on differential geometry.It appears in unlikely fields such as game theory. In economics, Brouwer's fixed-point theorem and its extension, the Kakutani fixed-point theorem, play a central role in the proof of existence of general equilibrium in market economies as developed in the 1950s by economics Nobel prize winners Kenneth Arrow and Gérard Debreu.The theorem was first studied in view of work on differential equations by the French mathematicians around Poincaré and Picard.Proving results such as the Poincaré–Bendixson theorem requires the use of topological methods.This work at the end of the 19th century opened into several successive versions of the theorem. The general case was first proved in 1910 by Jacques Hadamard and by Luitzen Egbertus Jan Brouwer.