Let's consider the metric space $BbbQ$ with the euclidian metric of $BbbR$

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Understanding the theorem:



Let's consider the metric space $BbbQ$ with the euclidian metric from $BbbR$.



Let $a,bin$ $BbbRsetminusBbbQ$ with $a<b$ and $S=(a,b)capBbbQ$ . Prove that $S$ is closed and bounded in $BbbQ$, but not compact.



My question is why $S$ is not compact if Heine-Borel's theorem tells me that if a set is closed and bounded then the set is compact.










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  • Heine-Borel's theorem tells me that if a set is closed and bounded then the set is connected - you mean the set is compact.
    – Brevan Ellefsen
    Sep 8 at 4:28











  • The Heine-Borel theorem is about the topology on $R^n.$ However, note you are proving $S$ is compact in $mathbbQ$, not in $mathbbR$!
    – Brevan Ellefsen
    Sep 8 at 4:30











  • Please fix the typo. connected -> compact. Note that the Heine Borel theorem applies to $mathbbR^n$. Note that $S$ is not complete, so there are Cauchy sequences that do not have a limit.
    – copper.hat
    Sep 8 at 4:37










  • Yes! thank you, I thought the same thing but I dont was not sure.
    – camilo
    Sep 8 at 4:38






  • 1




    @dmtri $a$ must be irrational, and so is $b$. Hence, $S$ may be written as $[a,b]cap mathbb Q$, which is closed in $mathbb Q$ for the induced topology.
    – Suzet
    Sep 8 at 5:20















up vote
1
down vote

favorite












Understanding the theorem:



Let's consider the metric space $BbbQ$ with the euclidian metric from $BbbR$.



Let $a,bin$ $BbbRsetminusBbbQ$ with $a<b$ and $S=(a,b)capBbbQ$ . Prove that $S$ is closed and bounded in $BbbQ$, but not compact.



My question is why $S$ is not compact if Heine-Borel's theorem tells me that if a set is closed and bounded then the set is compact.










share|cite|improve this question























  • Heine-Borel's theorem tells me that if a set is closed and bounded then the set is connected - you mean the set is compact.
    – Brevan Ellefsen
    Sep 8 at 4:28











  • The Heine-Borel theorem is about the topology on $R^n.$ However, note you are proving $S$ is compact in $mathbbQ$, not in $mathbbR$!
    – Brevan Ellefsen
    Sep 8 at 4:30











  • Please fix the typo. connected -> compact. Note that the Heine Borel theorem applies to $mathbbR^n$. Note that $S$ is not complete, so there are Cauchy sequences that do not have a limit.
    – copper.hat
    Sep 8 at 4:37










  • Yes! thank you, I thought the same thing but I dont was not sure.
    – camilo
    Sep 8 at 4:38






  • 1




    @dmtri $a$ must be irrational, and so is $b$. Hence, $S$ may be written as $[a,b]cap mathbb Q$, which is closed in $mathbb Q$ for the induced topology.
    – Suzet
    Sep 8 at 5:20













up vote
1
down vote

favorite









up vote
1
down vote

favorite











Understanding the theorem:



Let's consider the metric space $BbbQ$ with the euclidian metric from $BbbR$.



Let $a,bin$ $BbbRsetminusBbbQ$ with $a<b$ and $S=(a,b)capBbbQ$ . Prove that $S$ is closed and bounded in $BbbQ$, but not compact.



My question is why $S$ is not compact if Heine-Borel's theorem tells me that if a set is closed and bounded then the set is compact.










share|cite|improve this question















Understanding the theorem:



Let's consider the metric space $BbbQ$ with the euclidian metric from $BbbR$.



Let $a,bin$ $BbbRsetminusBbbQ$ with $a<b$ and $S=(a,b)capBbbQ$ . Prove that $S$ is closed and bounded in $BbbQ$, but not compact.



My question is why $S$ is not compact if Heine-Borel's theorem tells me that if a set is closed and bounded then the set is compact.







general-topology






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edited Sep 8 at 11:29









Javi

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asked Sep 8 at 4:25









camilo

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  • Heine-Borel's theorem tells me that if a set is closed and bounded then the set is connected - you mean the set is compact.
    – Brevan Ellefsen
    Sep 8 at 4:28











  • The Heine-Borel theorem is about the topology on $R^n.$ However, note you are proving $S$ is compact in $mathbbQ$, not in $mathbbR$!
    – Brevan Ellefsen
    Sep 8 at 4:30











  • Please fix the typo. connected -> compact. Note that the Heine Borel theorem applies to $mathbbR^n$. Note that $S$ is not complete, so there are Cauchy sequences that do not have a limit.
    – copper.hat
    Sep 8 at 4:37










  • Yes! thank you, I thought the same thing but I dont was not sure.
    – camilo
    Sep 8 at 4:38






  • 1




    @dmtri $a$ must be irrational, and so is $b$. Hence, $S$ may be written as $[a,b]cap mathbb Q$, which is closed in $mathbb Q$ for the induced topology.
    – Suzet
    Sep 8 at 5:20

















  • Heine-Borel's theorem tells me that if a set is closed and bounded then the set is connected - you mean the set is compact.
    – Brevan Ellefsen
    Sep 8 at 4:28











  • The Heine-Borel theorem is about the topology on $R^n.$ However, note you are proving $S$ is compact in $mathbbQ$, not in $mathbbR$!
    – Brevan Ellefsen
    Sep 8 at 4:30











  • Please fix the typo. connected -> compact. Note that the Heine Borel theorem applies to $mathbbR^n$. Note that $S$ is not complete, so there are Cauchy sequences that do not have a limit.
    – copper.hat
    Sep 8 at 4:37










  • Yes! thank you, I thought the same thing but I dont was not sure.
    – camilo
    Sep 8 at 4:38






  • 1




    @dmtri $a$ must be irrational, and so is $b$. Hence, $S$ may be written as $[a,b]cap mathbb Q$, which is closed in $mathbb Q$ for the induced topology.
    – Suzet
    Sep 8 at 5:20
















Heine-Borel's theorem tells me that if a set is closed and bounded then the set is connected - you mean the set is compact.
– Brevan Ellefsen
Sep 8 at 4:28





Heine-Borel's theorem tells me that if a set is closed and bounded then the set is connected - you mean the set is compact.
– Brevan Ellefsen
Sep 8 at 4:28













The Heine-Borel theorem is about the topology on $R^n.$ However, note you are proving $S$ is compact in $mathbbQ$, not in $mathbbR$!
– Brevan Ellefsen
Sep 8 at 4:30





The Heine-Borel theorem is about the topology on $R^n.$ However, note you are proving $S$ is compact in $mathbbQ$, not in $mathbbR$!
– Brevan Ellefsen
Sep 8 at 4:30













Please fix the typo. connected -> compact. Note that the Heine Borel theorem applies to $mathbbR^n$. Note that $S$ is not complete, so there are Cauchy sequences that do not have a limit.
– copper.hat
Sep 8 at 4:37




Please fix the typo. connected -> compact. Note that the Heine Borel theorem applies to $mathbbR^n$. Note that $S$ is not complete, so there are Cauchy sequences that do not have a limit.
– copper.hat
Sep 8 at 4:37












Yes! thank you, I thought the same thing but I dont was not sure.
– camilo
Sep 8 at 4:38




Yes! thank you, I thought the same thing but I dont was not sure.
– camilo
Sep 8 at 4:38




1




1




@dmtri $a$ must be irrational, and so is $b$. Hence, $S$ may be written as $[a,b]cap mathbb Q$, which is closed in $mathbb Q$ for the induced topology.
– Suzet
Sep 8 at 5:20





@dmtri $a$ must be irrational, and so is $b$. Hence, $S$ may be written as $[a,b]cap mathbb Q$, which is closed in $mathbb Q$ for the induced topology.
– Suzet
Sep 8 at 5:20











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Heine-Borel's theorem talks about subsets of $mathbbR^n$ but you are dealing with a subset of $mathbbQ$. While being bounded doesn't depend on the choice of the "big" space being closed does. For example $(-sqrt2, sqrt2)capmathbbQ$ is closed in $mathbbQ$ but not in $mathbbR$.



So back to your question. For any real number $rinmathbbR$ there exists a sequence $(q_n)subseteqmathbbQ$ convergent to $r$. Also if $a,binmathbbR$, $a<b$ then there exists a irrational $zinmathbbRbackslashmathbbQ$ such that $a<z<b$. These two facts together imply $(a,b)capmathbbQ$ cannot be compact for any $a<b$.



Now your $S$ is obviously bounded. It is also closed because $(a,b)capmathbbQ=[a,b]capmathbbQ$ if $a,b$ are irrational.






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    1 Answer
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    1 Answer
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    active

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    up vote
    3
    down vote













    Heine-Borel's theorem talks about subsets of $mathbbR^n$ but you are dealing with a subset of $mathbbQ$. While being bounded doesn't depend on the choice of the "big" space being closed does. For example $(-sqrt2, sqrt2)capmathbbQ$ is closed in $mathbbQ$ but not in $mathbbR$.



    So back to your question. For any real number $rinmathbbR$ there exists a sequence $(q_n)subseteqmathbbQ$ convergent to $r$. Also if $a,binmathbbR$, $a<b$ then there exists a irrational $zinmathbbRbackslashmathbbQ$ such that $a<z<b$. These two facts together imply $(a,b)capmathbbQ$ cannot be compact for any $a<b$.



    Now your $S$ is obviously bounded. It is also closed because $(a,b)capmathbbQ=[a,b]capmathbbQ$ if $a,b$ are irrational.






    share|cite|improve this answer
























      up vote
      3
      down vote













      Heine-Borel's theorem talks about subsets of $mathbbR^n$ but you are dealing with a subset of $mathbbQ$. While being bounded doesn't depend on the choice of the "big" space being closed does. For example $(-sqrt2, sqrt2)capmathbbQ$ is closed in $mathbbQ$ but not in $mathbbR$.



      So back to your question. For any real number $rinmathbbR$ there exists a sequence $(q_n)subseteqmathbbQ$ convergent to $r$. Also if $a,binmathbbR$, $a<b$ then there exists a irrational $zinmathbbRbackslashmathbbQ$ such that $a<z<b$. These two facts together imply $(a,b)capmathbbQ$ cannot be compact for any $a<b$.



      Now your $S$ is obviously bounded. It is also closed because $(a,b)capmathbbQ=[a,b]capmathbbQ$ if $a,b$ are irrational.






      share|cite|improve this answer






















        up vote
        3
        down vote










        up vote
        3
        down vote









        Heine-Borel's theorem talks about subsets of $mathbbR^n$ but you are dealing with a subset of $mathbbQ$. While being bounded doesn't depend on the choice of the "big" space being closed does. For example $(-sqrt2, sqrt2)capmathbbQ$ is closed in $mathbbQ$ but not in $mathbbR$.



        So back to your question. For any real number $rinmathbbR$ there exists a sequence $(q_n)subseteqmathbbQ$ convergent to $r$. Also if $a,binmathbbR$, $a<b$ then there exists a irrational $zinmathbbRbackslashmathbbQ$ such that $a<z<b$. These two facts together imply $(a,b)capmathbbQ$ cannot be compact for any $a<b$.



        Now your $S$ is obviously bounded. It is also closed because $(a,b)capmathbbQ=[a,b]capmathbbQ$ if $a,b$ are irrational.






        share|cite|improve this answer












        Heine-Borel's theorem talks about subsets of $mathbbR^n$ but you are dealing with a subset of $mathbbQ$. While being bounded doesn't depend on the choice of the "big" space being closed does. For example $(-sqrt2, sqrt2)capmathbbQ$ is closed in $mathbbQ$ but not in $mathbbR$.



        So back to your question. For any real number $rinmathbbR$ there exists a sequence $(q_n)subseteqmathbbQ$ convergent to $r$. Also if $a,binmathbbR$, $a<b$ then there exists a irrational $zinmathbbRbackslashmathbbQ$ such that $a<z<b$. These two facts together imply $(a,b)capmathbbQ$ cannot be compact for any $a<b$.



        Now your $S$ is obviously bounded. It is also closed because $(a,b)capmathbbQ=[a,b]capmathbbQ$ if $a,b$ are irrational.







        share|cite|improve this answer












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        answered Sep 8 at 7:19









        freakish

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