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In mathematics, a real-valued function is a function whose values are real numbers. In other words, it is a function that assigns a real number to each member of its domain.
Real-valued functions of a real variable (commonly called real functions) and real-valued functions of several real variables are the main object of study of calculus and, more generally, real analysis. In particular, many function spaces consist of real-valued functions.
Algebraic structure
editLet be the set of all functions from a set X to real numbers . Because is a field, may be turned into a vector space and a commutative algebra over the reals with the following operations:
- – vector addition
- – additive identity
- – scalar multiplication
- – pointwise multiplication
These operations extend to partial functions from X to with the restriction that the partial functions f + g and f g are defined only if the domains of f and g have a nonempty intersection; in this case, their domain is the intersection of the domains of f and g.
Also, since is an ordered set, there is a partial order
on which makes a partially ordered ring.
Measurable
editThe
Moreover, a set (family) of real-valued functions on X can actually define a
Continuous
editReal numbers form a topological space and a complete metric space. Continuous real-valued functions (which implies that X is a topological space) are important in theories of topological spaces and of metric spaces. The extreme value theorem states that for any real continuous function on a compact space its global maximum and minimum exist.
The concept of metric space itself is defined with a real-valued function of two variables, the metric, which is continuous. The space of continuous functions on a compact Hausdorff space has a particular importance. Convergent sequences also can be considered as real-valued continuous functions on a special topological space.
Continuous functions also form a vector space and an algebra as explained above in § Algebraic structure, and are a subclass of measurable functions because any topological space has the
Smooth
editReal numbers are used as the codomain to define smooth functions. A domain of a real smooth function can be the real coordinate space (which yields a real multivariable function), a topological vector space,[1] an open subset of them, or a smooth manifold.
Spaces of smooth functions also are vector spaces and algebras as explained above in § Algebraic structure and are subspaces of the space of continuous functions.
Appearances in measure theory
editA measure on a set is a non-negative real-valued functional on a
For example, pointwise product of two L2 functions belongs to L1.
Other appearances
editOther contexts where real-valued functions and their special properties are used include monotonic functions (on ordered sets), convex functions (on vector and affine spaces), harmonic and subharmonic functions (on Riemannian manifolds), analytic functions (usually of one or more real variables), algebraic functions (on real algebraic varieties), and polynomials (of one or more real variables).
See also
edit- Real analysis
- Partial differential equations, a major user of real-valued functions
- Norm (mathematics)
- Scalar (mathematics)
Footnotes
edit- ^ Different definitions of derivative exist in general, but for finite dimensions they result in equivalent definitions of classes of smooth functions.
- ^ Actually, a measure may have values in [0, +∞]: see extended real number line.
References
edit- Apostol, Tom M. (1974). Mathematical Analysis (2nd ed.). Addison–Wesley. ISBN 978-0-201-00288-1.
- Gerald Folland, Real Analysis: Modern Techniques and Their Applications, Second Edition, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1999, ISBN 0-471-31716-0.
- Rudin, Walter (1976). Principles of Mathematical Analysis (3rd ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 978-0-07-054235-8.