I want to show the function $f:[0,1]\to \mathbb{R}$
$f=\left\{ \begin{array}{ll} x^{3/2}\sin\left(\frac{1}{x}\right), & {x \in (0,1]} \\ 0, & x=0 \end{array} \right.$
is absolutely continuous.
My attempt:
I broke it to functions $x^{3/2}$ and $\sin(\frac{1}{x})$. The first one is a.c. since it is increasing, for the second one I wrote the definition of absolute continuity:
$\sin\left(\frac{1}{x_i+\delta}\right)-\sin\left(\frac{1}{x_i}\right)=2\cos\left(\frac{2x_i+\delta}{2(x_i+\delta)x_i}\right)\sin\left(\frac{-\delta}{2(x_i+\delta)x_i}\right)$ but I don't see how it is smaller that $\epsilon\ \forall i$! Can I say for each $ϵ$ I'll find $δ=min\{ϵ,ϵ2x_i\}$ so that it converges to zero?
Another thing that I tried was using uniform integrability of ${\mbox{Diff}_\delta \ f}_{0< h\leq 1}$ but the integral results in $\Gamma$ function and imaginary number that I don't know how to handle!