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In the mathematical areas of number theory and analysis, an infinite sequence or a function is said to eventually have a certain property, if it does not have the said property across all its ordered instances, but will after some instances have passed. The use of the term "eventually" can be often rephrased as "for sufficiently large numbers",[1] and can be also extended to the class of properties that apply to elements of any ordered set (such as sequences and subsets of ).
Notation
editThe general form where the phrase eventually (or sufficiently large) is found appears as follows:
- is eventually true for ( is true for sufficiently large ),
where and are the universal and existential quantifiers, which is actually a shorthand for:
- such that is true
or somewhat more formally:
This does not necessarily mean that any particular value for is known, but only that such an exists. The phrase "sufficiently large" should not be confused with the phrases "arbitrarily large" or "infinitely large". For more, see Arbitrarily large#Arbitrarily large vs. sufficiently large vs. infinitely large.
Motivation and definition
editFor an infinite sequence, one is often more interested in the long-term behaviors of the sequence than the behaviors it exhibits early on. In which case, one way to formally capture this concept is to say that the sequence possesses a certain property eventually, or equivalently, that the property is satisfied by one of its subsequences , for some .[2]
For example, the definition of a sequence of real numbers converging to some limit is:
- For each positive number , there exists a natural number such that for all , .
When the term "eventually" is used as a shorthand for "there exists a natural number such that for all ", the convergence definition can be restated more simply as:
- For each positive number , eventually .
Here, notice that the set of natural numbers that do not satisfy this property is a finite set; that is, the set is empty or has a maximum element. As a result, the use of "eventually" in this case is synonymous with the expression "for all but a finite number of terms" – a special case of the expression "for almost all terms" (although "almost all" can also be used to allow for infinitely many exceptions as well).
At the basic level, a sequence can be thought of as a function with natural numbers as its domain, and the notion of "eventually" applies to functions on more general sets as well—in particular to those that have an ordering with no greatest element.
More specifically, if is such a set and there is an element in such that the function is defined for all elements greater than , then is said to have some property eventually if there is an element such that whenever , has the said property. This notion is used, for example, in the study of Hardy fields, which are fields made up of real functions, each of which have certain properties eventually.
Examples
edit- "All primes greater than 2 are odd" can be written as "Eventually, all primes are odd.”
- Eventually, all primes are congruent to ±1 modulo 6.
- The square of a prime is eventually congruent to 1 mod 24 (specifically, this is true for all primes greater than 3).
- The factorial of a natural number eventually ends in the digit 0 (specifically, this is true for all natural numbers greater than 4).
Other uses in mathematics
edit- A 3-manifold is called sufficiently large if it contains a properly embedded 2-sided incompressible surface. This property is the main requirement for a 3-manifold to be called a Haken manifold.
- Temporal logic introduces an operator that can be used to express statements interpretable as: Certain property will eventually hold in a future moment in time.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Sufficiently Large". mathworld.wolfram.com. Retrieved 2019-11-20.
- ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Eventually". mathworld.wolfram.com. Retrieved 2019-11-20.