Chapter 23: Real Analysis and Series of Functions (Set-1)

Which set equals the real line ℝ?

A All rational numbers
B All complex numbers
C All real numbers
D Only integers

Which is an open interval?

A [a, b]
B [a, b)
C (a, b]
D (a, b)

Which is a closed interval?

A [a, b]
B (a, b)
C (a, b]
D [a, b)

What is a neighborhood of a real number a?

A Points exactly at a
B Points within some radius
C All rationals near a
D All integers near a

Which expression defines absolute value |x|?

A Always x
B Distance from 0
C Distance from 1
D Always −x

What does “x ≤ y” mean on real line?

A x is left of y
B x equals y
C x is right of y
D x is not comparable

Which set property is unique to ℝ?

A Has only integers
B Only finite sets
C Only rationals
D Least upper bound

Supremum of a set is

A Any upper bound
B Greatest element only
C Least upper bound
D Least element only

Infimum of a set is

A Greatest lower bound
B Any lower bound
C Greatest element
D Least upper bound

If a set has a maximum, then its supremum is

A Smaller than maximum
B Larger than maximum
C Not defined
D Equal to maximum

Which set is bounded above?

A All integers
B (−∞, 5]
C ℝ itself
D (0, ∞)

Which set is bounded?

A (0, 1)
B (0, ∞)
C (−∞, 3)
D All integers

A set is bounded below if

A Has maximum element
B Has some lower bound
C Has supremum only
D Contains 0

What is the usual metric on ℝ?

A d(x,y)=x+y
B d(x,y)=|x−y|
C d(x,y)=xy
D d(x,y)=x/y

Archimedean property means

A n exceeds any real
B ℝ has gaps
C Integers are bounded
D Only rationals exist

Density of rationals means

A ℚ has maximum
B Between reals exists rational
C ℚ is uncountable
D ℚ equals ℝ

Between any two distinct reals, there exists

A Only integers
B No irrational
C Only natural numbers
D A rational number

Least upper bound property applies to

A Nonempty bounded-above set
B Empty set
C Any set of ℝ
D Only finite sets

If S is bounded below and nonempty, then

A sup S must be 0
B S must be finite
C S must contain inf
D inf S exists in ℝ

Which indicates a set is unbounded?

A Has upper bound
B No finite bound exists
C Has lower bound
D Contains a maximum

Pointwise convergence means fₙ(x) → f(x)

A For each fixed x
B For all x, same speed
C Only at one point
D Only uniformly

Uniform convergence means fₙ → f

A Depends on x
B Same control for all x
C Only at endpoints
D Only for series

Which is stronger?

A Pointwise convergence
B Both same always
C Uniform convergence
D Neither implies other

Cauchy criterion for uniform convergence says

A Differences get small uniformly
B fₙ(x) equals f(x)
C Only derivatives converge
D Only integrals converge

If fₙ are continuous and converge uniformly, then f is

A Discontinuous always
B Continuous
C Undefined
D Only piecewise continuous

Uniform convergence helps interchange limit and

A Random choice
B Continuity operations
C Only inequalities
D Only algebra

Weierstrass M-test is used for

A Pointwise divergence
B Uniform convergence of series
C Finding derivatives only
D Solving equations

M-test requires |fₙ(x)| ≤

A fₙ(x) itself
B A constant Mₙ
C x always
D 1/n always

A series of functions is ∑ fₙ(x). It converges pointwise if

A ∑ fₙ(x) converges for each x
B Same N works all x
C fₙ are continuous
D Domain is bounded

Uniform convergence of ∑ fₙ(x) means partial sums S_N(x)

A Converge uniformly
B Converge only at one x
C Diverge always
D Must be polynomials

A power series centered at a is

A ∑ aₙx
B ∑ aⁿxₙ
C ∑ (x+a)
D ∑ aₙ(x−a)ⁿ

Radius of convergence R describes

A Where it converges absolutely
B Where it always diverges
C Only endpoint behavior
D Only derivative existence

Which test often finds radius R?

A Mean value theorem
B Ratio test
C Intermediate value theorem
D Fermat theorem

Inside the radius, a power series converges

A Conditionally only
B Absolutely
C Never
D Only at center

Outside the radius, a power series

A Diverges
B Converges absolutely
C Always equals 0
D Converges at infinity

At endpoints |x−a|=R, convergence is

A Always convergent
B Always divergent
C Must be checked separately
D Same as inside

Term-by-term differentiation of a power series is valid

A Only at endpoints
B Inside radius
C Only at x=0
D Never valid

Term-by-term integration of a power series is valid

A Only outside radius
B Inside radius
C Only at x=a
D Only for finite sums

Maclaurin series is Taylor series centered at

A a=0
B a=1
C a=−1
D a=π

Power series are called “analytic” idea because they

A Always finite
B Represent functions locally
C Never converge
D Ignore derivatives

A real sequence (xₙ) converges to L if

A xₙ equals L always
B xₙ gets arbitrarily close
C xₙ is bounded only
D xₙ is increasing only

A Cauchy sequence means

A Terms approach 0
B Terms get close to each other
C Terms are monotone
D Terms are periodic

Completeness of ℝ implies

A Every bounded set has max
B Every Cauchy sequence converges
C Every sequence is monotone
D Every set is countable

Monotone convergence theorem (basic) says

A Bounded monotone sequence converges
B Any sequence converges
C Only decreasing converges
D Only increasing diverges

Bolzano–Weierstrass theorem states

A Every series converges
B Every bounded sequence has convergent subsequence
C Every function is continuous
D Every open set is closed

A series ∑ aₙ converges absolutely if

A ∑ aₙ converges
B ∑ |aₙ| converges
C aₙ alternates
D aₙ decreases

Alternating series test needs terms that

A Decrease to 0
B Increase in size
C Stay constant
D Are all positive

Comparison test compares ∑ aₙ with

A A function only
B Another known series
C A derivative only
D A random sequence

Root test checks limit of

A aₙ₊₁ − aₙ
B √[n]{|aₙ|}
C aₙ / n
D n·aₙ

Uniform convergence is most useful because it allows

A Changing domain size
B Swapping limit with integration
C Making series finite
D Removing continuity

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