Would real analysis be complete without the fundamental theorem of calculus? (Q294076): Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 09:04, 30 July 2024

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Would real analysis be complete without the fundamental theorem of calculus?
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    Would real analysis be complete without the fundamental theorem of calculus? (English)
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    9 June 2016
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    In recent years, many results in real analysis have been shown to be equivalent to the completeness of \(\mathbb R\); see the paper by \textit{J. Propp} [Am. Math. Mon. 120, No. 5, 392--408 (2013; Zbl 1305.12002)]. The present paper adds the fundamental theorem of calculus to this list of equivalencies. This is done by the following two theorems. (I) If \(\mathbb F\) is an ordered subfield of \(\mathbb R\), then \(\mathbb F\) is complete if and only if every continuous function on a closed bounded interval has a uniformly differentiable primitive. (II) If \(\mathbb F\) is an ordered subfield of \(\mathbb R\), then \(\mathbb F\) is complete if and only if every continuous function on a closed bounded interval is Riemann integrable. The main part of the proof is the construction of a continuous Propp function that has a primitive whose value at \(1\) is in \(\mathbb R\setminus \mathbb F\). This paper has several other interesting results related to this topic.
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    completeness
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    fundamental theorems calculus
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    Propp function
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