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Semi-continuity

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In mathematical analysis, semi-continuity (or semicontinuity) is a property of real-valued functions that is weaker than continuity. A real-valued function f is upper semi-continuous at a point x0 if, roughly speaking, the function values for arguments near x0 do not rapidly jump upwards. If they don't rapidly jump downwards, the function is called lower semi-continuous at x0.

Examples

Consider the function f(x) = -1 for x < 0 and f(x) = 1 for x ≥ 0. This function is upper semi-continuous at x0 = 0, but not lower semi-continuous.

The function floor(x), which returns the greatest integer smaller than a given x, is everywhere upper semi-continuous.

Imagine that you are scanning a certain scenery with your eyes and record the distance to the viewed object at all times. This yields a lower semi-continuous function which in general is not upper semi-continuous (for instance if you focus on the edge of a table).

Formal definition

Suppose X is a topological space, x0 is a point in X and f : X → R is a real-valued function. We say that f is upper semi-continuous at x0 if for every ε > 0 there exists a neighborhood U of x0 such that f(x) < f(x0) + ε for all x in U. Equivalently, this can be expressed as

lim supx x0f(x) ≤ f(x0).

The function f is called upper semi-continuous if it is upper semi-continuous at every point of its domain. Then {xX : f(x) < α} is an open set for every α∈R.

We say that f is lower semi-continuous at x0 if for every ε > 0 there exists a neighborhood U of x0 such that f(x) > f(x0) - ε for all x in U. Equivalently, this can be expressed as

lim infx x0 f(x) ≥ f(x0).

The function f is called lower semi-continuous if it is lower semi-continuous at every point of its domain. Then {xX : f(x) > α} is an open set for every α∈R.

Properties

A function is continuous at x0 if and only if it is upper and lower semi-continuous there.

If f and g are two functions which are both upper semi-continuous at x0, then so is f + g. If both functions are non-negative, then the product function fg will also be upper semi-continuous at x0. Multiplying a positive upper semi-continuous function with a negative number turns it into a lower semi-continuous function.

If C is a compact space (for instance a closed interval [a, b]) and f : C → R is upper semi-continuous, then f has a maximum on C. The analogous statement for lower semi-continuous functions and minima is also true.

Suppose fn : X → R is a lower semi-continuous function for every natural number n, and

f(x) := sup {fn(x) : n in N} < ∞

for every x in X. Then f is lower semi-continuous. Even if all the fn are continuous, f need not be continuous.

The characteristic function of an open set is lower semicontinuous. The characteristic function of a closed set is upper semicontinuous.

Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page) Semicontinuity (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semicontinuity) version history (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Semicontinuity&action=history) GNU Free Documentation Lizenz (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_the_GNU_Free_Documentation_License) CC-by-sa (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5/)

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