Home
Archaeology
Astronomy
Biology
Books
Business
Chemistry
Coins
Computers
Conservation
Cooking
Earth Science
Farming
Economics
Finance
Games
Geography
Health Science
History by Date
Hobbies
Law
Mathematics
Medicine
Military Technology
Movies
Music
People
Pharmacology
Philosophy
Physics
Psychology
Religion
Science History
Technology
Sports
Television
Video
Visual Art
Privacy
Contact Us



Intermediate value theorem

In calculus, the intermediate value theorem is either of two theorems of which an account is given below.

Table of contents
1 Intermediate value theorem
2 Intermediate value theorem of integration

Intermediate value theorem

The intermediate value theorem of calculus states the following: Suppose that I is an interval in the real numbers R and that f : I -> R is a continuous function. Then the image set f ( I ) is also an interval.

It is frequently stated in the following equivalent form: Suppose that f : [a , b] -> R is continuous and that u is a real number satisfying f (a) < u < f (b) or f (a) > u > f (b). Then for some c in (a , b), f(c) = u.

This captures an intuitive property of continuous functions: if f (1) = 3 and f (2) = 5 then f must be equal to 4 somewhere between 1 and 2. It represents the idea that the graph of a continuous function can be drawn without lifting your pencil from the paper.

Proof of the theorem: We shall prove the first case f (a) < u < f (b); the second is similar.

Let S = {x in [a, b] : f(x) ≤ u}. Then S is non-empty (as a is in S) and bounded above by b. Hence by the continuum property of the real numbers, the supremum c = sup S exists. We claim that f (c) = u.

Suppose first that f (c) > u. Then f (c) - u > 0, so there is a δ > 0 such that | f (x) - f (c) | < f (c) - u whenever | x - c | < δ, since f is continuous. But then f (x) > f (c) - ( f (c) - u ) = u whenever | x - c | < δ and then f (x) > u for x in ( c - δ , c + δ) and thus c - δ is an upper bound for S which is smaller than c, a contradiction.

Suppose next that f (c) < u. Again, by continuity, there is an δ > 0 such that | f (x) - f (c) | < u - f (c) whenever | x - c | < δ. Then f (x) < f (c) + ( u - f (c) ) = u for x in ( c - δ , c + δ) and there are numbers x greater than c for which f (x) < u, again a contradiction to the definition of c.

We deduce that f (c) = u as stated.

The intermediate value theorem is in essence equivalent to Rolle's theorem. For u=0 above, it is also known as Bolzano's theorem and follows immediately from the intermediate value theorem of calculus. This theorem was first stated, together with a proof which used techniques which are now regarded as non-rigorous, by Bernard Bolzano.

Generalization

The intermediate value theorem can be seen as a consequence of the following two statements from topology:

  • If X and Y are topological spaces, f : X -> Y is continuous, and X is connected, then f(X) is connected.
  • A subset of R is connected if and only if it is an interval.

Intermediate value theorem of integration

In integration the intermediate value theorem has a different twist. In this context (derived from the intermediate value theorem above) it is used to refer to the following fact:

Assume is a continuous function on some interval (which is typically the real numbers, R). Then the area under the function on a certain interval is equal to the length of the interval multiplied by some function value such that .


Copyright 2004. All rights reserved.