4
$\begingroup$

Suppose ${f_n}$ are uniformly bounded and equicontinuous on some closed interval $[a,b]$. Therefore, by Arzela-Ascoli we know that $f_n$ has a uniformly convergent subsequence.

But we can also apply Arzela-Ascoli to the subsequences of $f_n$ to get that every subsequence of $f_n$ has a subsequence that converges uniformly. And we have some extra information that says each of the subsequences of subsequences converges uniformly to the same thing.

How do you conclude that $f_n$ converges uniformly from this?

  • 1
    In any topological space if you have a sequence $f_n$ with the property that every subsequence has a further subsequence $f_{n_k}$ which converges to a fixed $f$ in the space, then $f_n$ converges to that $f$. The proof is to observe that if $f_n$ does not converge to $f$ then there is a subsequence which does not ever get 'close' to $f$. But then this subsequence has a subsequence which converges to $f$, which is your contradiction.2012-09-18

1 Answers 1

6

Let $f$ be the common limit of the uniformly convergent subsequence. Suppose $f_n$ does not converge uniformly to $f$, so we have some $\epsilon>0$ and a collection of points $x_{n_k}\in [a,b]$ such that $n_k\to \infty$ and $\|f_{n_k}(x_{n_k})-f(x_{n_k})\|>\epsilon$. But then no subsequence of $f_{n_k}$ can converge uniformly to $f$, a contradiction. Hence $f_n$ converges uniformly to $f$.

  • 0
    Ohhh, you are too smart!2012-09-18