Hubbry Logo
search button
Sign in
Uniform boundedness
Uniform boundedness
Comunity Hub
History
arrow-down
starMore
arrow-down
bob

Bob

Have a question related to this hub?

bob

Alice

Got something to say related to this hub?
Share it here.

#general is a chat channel to discuss anything related to the hub.
Hubbry Logo
search button
Sign in
Uniform boundedness
Community hub for the Wikipedia article
logoWikipedian hub
Welcome to the community hub built on top of the Uniform boundedness Wikipedia article. Here, you can discuss, collect, and organize anything related to Uniform boundedness. The purpose of the hub is to c...
Add your contribution
Uniform boundedness

In mathematics, a uniformly bounded family of functions is a family of bounded functions that can all be bounded by the same constant. This constant is larger than or equal to the absolute value of any value of any of the functions in the family.

Definition

[edit]

Real line and complex plane

[edit]

Let

be a family of functions indexed by , where is an arbitrary set and is either the set of real or complex numbers . We call uniformly bounded if there exists a real number such that

Another way of stating this would be the following:

Metric space

[edit]

In general let be a metric space with metric , then the set

is called uniformly bounded if there exists an element from and a real number such that

Examples

[edit]
  • Every uniformly convergent sequence of bounded functions is uniformly bounded.
  • The family of functions defined for real with traveling through the integers, is uniformly bounded by 1.
  • The family of derivatives of the above family, is not uniformly bounded. Each is bounded by but there is no real number such that for all integers

References

[edit]
  • Ma, Tsoy-Wo (2002). Banach–Hilbert spaces, vector measures, group representations. World Scientific. p. 620pp. ISBN 981-238-038-8.