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  2. Upper and lower bounds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Upper_and_lower_bounds

    A set with an upper (respectively, lower) bound is said to be bounded from above or majorized [1] (respectively bounded from below or minorized) by that bound. The terms bounded above ( bounded below ) are also used in the mathematical literature for sets that have upper (respectively lower) bounds.

  3. Bounded function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bounded_function

    A bounded operator: is not a bounded function in the sense of this page's definition (unless =), but has the weaker property of preserving boundedness; bounded sets are mapped to bounded sets (). This definition can be extended to any function f : X → Y {\displaystyle f:X\rightarrow Y} if X {\displaystyle X} and Y {\displaystyle Y} allow for ...

  4. Bounded set - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bounded_set

    The metric space (M, d) is a bounded metric space (or d is a bounded metric) if M is bounded as a subset of itself. Total boundedness implies boundedness. For subsets of R n the two are equivalent. A metric space is compact if and only if it is complete and totally bounded. A subset of Euclidean space R n is compact if and only if it is closed and

  5. Local boundedness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Local_boundedness

    In other words, all the functions in the family must be locally bounded, and around each point they need to be bounded by the same constant. This definition can also be extended to the case when the functions in the family U take values in some metric space, by again replacing the absolute value with the distance function.

  6. Interval (mathematics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interval_(mathematics)

    The union of two intervals is an interval if and only if they have a non-empty intersection or an open end-point of one interval is a closed end-point of the other, for example (,) [,] = (,]. If R {\displaystyle \mathbb {R} } is viewed as a metric space , its open balls are the open bounded intervals ( c + r , c − r ) , and its closed balls ...

  7. Nested intervals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nested_intervals

    The length of the intervals get arbitrarily small (meaning the length falls below every possible threshold after a certain index ). In other words, the left bound of the interval I n {\displaystyle I_{n}} can only increase ( a n + 1 ≥ a n {\displaystyle a_{n+1}\geq a_{n}} ), and the right bound can only decrease ( b n + 1 ≤ b n ...

  8. Unbounded operator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unbounded_operator

    A densely defined symmetric [clarification needed] operator T on a Hilbert space H is called bounded from below if T + a is a positive operator for some real number a. That is, Tx|x ≥ −a ||x|| 2 for all x in the domain of T (or alternatively Tx|x ≥ a ||x|| 2 since a is arbitrary). [8] If both T and −T are bounded from below then T is ...

  9. Bounded set (topological vector space) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bounded_set_(topological...

    Using the definition of uniformly bounded sets given below, Mackey's countability condition can be restated as: If ,,, … are bounded subsets of a metrizable locally convex space then there exists a sequence ,,, … of positive real numbers such that ,,, … are uniformly bounded. In words, given any countable family of bounded sets in a ...