Complete metric space: Difference between revisions
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imported>Richard Pinch (added section on completionl, examples) |
imported>Richard Pinch (further example) |
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==Examples== | ==Examples== | ||
* The real numbers '''R''', and more generally finite-dimensional [[Euclidean space]]s, with the usual metric are complete. | * The real numbers '''R''', and more generally finite-dimensional [[Euclidean space]]s, with the usual metric are complete. | ||
* Any [[compact space|compact]] metric space is [[sequentially compact]] and hence complete. The converse does not hold: for example, '''R''' is complete but not compact. | |||
==Completion== | ==Completion== |
Revision as of 15:39, 1 November 2008
In mathematics, completeness is a property ascribed to a metric space in which every Cauchy sequence in that space is convergent. In other words, every Cauchy sequence in the metric space tends in the limit to a point which is again an element of that space. Hence the metric space is, in a sense, "complete."
Formal definition
Let X be a metric space with metric d. Then X is complete if for every Cauchy sequence there is an associated element such that .
Examples
- The real numbers R, and more generally finite-dimensional Euclidean spaces, with the usual metric are complete.
- Any compact metric space is sequentially compact and hence complete. The converse does not hold: for example, R is complete but not compact.
Completion
Every metric space X has a completion which is a complete metric space in which X is isometrically embedded as a dense subspace. The completion has a universal property.
Examples
- The real numbers R are the completion of the rational numbers Q with respect to the usual metric of absolute distance.