largarithmic
Member
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- Aug 9, 2011
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- HSC
- 2011
Since there's been a mood for cool problems recently, here's one. It's pretty hard but neat ^^
Let S be a (possibly infinite) collection of open intervals such that the union of S covers the closed interval [0,1]. Prove that there is a subset T of S with finitely many elements such that the union of T also covers [0,1].
Notation:
An open interval between a and b is the set of reals x such that a < x < b, and is denoted by (a,b).
A closed interval between a and b is the set of reals x such that a <= x <= b, and is denoted [a,b].
Let S be a (possibly infinite) collection of open intervals such that the union of S covers the closed interval [0,1]. Prove that there is a subset T of S with finitely many elements such that the union of T also covers [0,1].
Notation:
An open interval between a and b is the set of reals x such that a < x < b, and is denoted by (a,b).
A closed interval between a and b is the set of reals x such that a <= x <= b, and is denoted [a,b].