Is the Sum of Two Closed Sets in R^n Always Closed?

In summary: Thanks for the help!In summary, the question addresses whether the sum of two closed sets in R^n, A and B, must also be closed. From the conversation, it appears that A and B were assumed to be closed, and the counterexample provided shows that A+B need not be closed.
  • #1
benjamin111
6
0
We have two closed sets A,B in R^n. Does A+B= {x+y | x is an element of A, y is an element of B} have to be closed?

I know that both the union and intersection of two closed sets have to be closed. I'm guessing from the question that the answer is no, but I've been playing around with different intervals or R^2 sets that could represent A and B and can't come up with any counterexample to show that A+B need not be closed.

Thanks for any help you can offer!
 
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  • #2
benjamin111 said:
We have two sets A,B in R^n. Does A+B= {x+y | x is an element of A, y is an element of B} have to be closed?

I know that both the union and intersection of two closed sets have to be closed. I'm guessing from the question that the answer is no, but I've been playing around with different intervals or R^2 sets that could represent A and B and can't come up with any counterexample to show that A+B need not be closed.

Thanks for any help you can offer!

Have you tried choosing open intervals as your set. Try A={x|0<x<1} and B={y|3<y<4}
 
  • #3
Sorry, I thought i had included that A and B have to be closed but I forgot to write that in...
 
  • #4
A and B were not said to be closed in the OP, but judging by the topic, I suppose that was supposed to be the case. (edit: I was typing this before the previous comment by benjamin111)

I noticed that I couldn't get the result very straightly with basic topology. A disturbing thing...

If you assume that A and B are compact, I think it seems quite clear that you can get the compactness of A+B with sequences and subsequences. It could be that one way to solve your problem is to start diving those sets into bounded subsets, but I'm not sure... If you don't have any better ideas, why not give it a try?
 
  • #6
I guess I don't quite see how that parallels this sum of closed sets. Isn't it more like just dividing closed sets over and over? If you could run me through how to interpret the function in terms of the problem I'm looking at I'd be most appreciative
 
  • #7
benjamin111 said:
I guess I don't quite see how that parallels this sum of closed sets. Isn't it more like just dividing closed sets over and over? If you could run me through how to interpret the function in terms of the problem I'm looking at I'd be most appreciative

I must be asleep today. I was thinking intersection. Sorry.
 
  • #8
I believe I got this done. This is my outline for the proof:

Use Heine-Borel theorem, and the fact that in metric spaces compactness is equivalent to the sequential compactness, to prove that compactness of A+B follows from the compactness of A and B.

Then for arbitrary closed A and B, consider sets

[tex]
A_m := A \cap [-m,m]^n,\quad\quad B_m := B \cap [-m,m]^n
[/tex]

and some arbitrary point [itex]x\in\overline{A+B}[/itex].
 
  • #9
Well, consider the collection of sets [tex] \{i\}_i[/tex] where i is an integer. Now if we consider the set which is a sum of all these sets then it should be open.
 
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  • #10
Opps sorry for my latex mistake.

Any each set [tex]\{i\}[/tex] is closed isn't it? all limits withing [tex]\{i\}[/tex] contain i so it contains it's limit points. The set of natural numbers is not closed because it does not contain the upper limit right. Forgive me if my concepts of set theory are week.
 
  • #11
A+B need not to be closed!

benjamin111 said:
We have two closed sets A,B in R^n. Does A+B= {x+y | x is an element of A, y is an element of B} have to be closed?

I know that both the union and intersection of two closed sets have to be closed. I'm guessing from the question that the answer is no, but I've been playing around with different intervals or R^2 sets that could represent A and B and can't come up with any counterexample to show that A+B need not be closed.

Thanks for any help you can offer!


The sum of compact sets K_1 and K_2 is compact, and hence closed, as
K_1 x K_2 is compact,
Sum: R^n x R^n ---> R^n , Sum(x,y)=x+y is continuous,
and the image of compact sets is compact under continuous functions.

Thus, if you want to have a counterexample, you have
to deal with unbounded sets, as:
set X compact <===> X bounded and closed
in R^n

Why not take this in R^2:

A= y-axis
B= graph of function f:[0,1) ---> R, f(x) = 1/(1-x)

A and B are closed.

But
A + B = [0,1) x R,
which is not closed.
 
  • #12
Very nice, I see my mistake.
 

FAQ: Is the Sum of Two Closed Sets in R^n Always Closed?

What does it mean for a set to be closed?

In mathematics, a set is considered closed if it contains all its limit points. This means that any sequence of points within the set must have a limit point also contained within the set.

How do you determine if a set is closed or not?

There are a few methods for determining if a set is closed. One way is to check if the complement of the set is open. Another way is to check if the set contains all its limit points. If both of these conditions are true, then the set is closed.

Can a sum of closed sets ever be open?

Yes, a sum of closed sets can be open. For example, consider the closed sets [0,1] and [2,3] in the real number line. The sum of these two sets is the open interval (1,2), which is not closed.

Is the intersection of closed sets always closed?

Yes, the intersection of closed sets is always closed. This is because the intersection of closed sets must also contain all their limit points, making it closed as well.

What is the relationship between closed sets and open sets?

Closed sets and open sets are complementary concepts. A set can either be closed, open, or neither. A set is closed if its complement is open, and vice versa. Additionally, a set is considered both closed and open if it is the empty set or the entire space.

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