Abstract and Applied Analysis
Volume 2008 (2008), Article ID 485706, 5 pages
doi:10.1155/2008/485706
Research Article
Slowly Oscillating Continuity
Department of Mathematics, Faculty of Science and Letters, Maltepe University, 34857 Maltepe, Istanbul, Turkey
Received 2 November 2007; Accepted 11 February 2008
Academic Editor: Ferhan Atici
Copyright © 2008 H. Çakalli. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Abstract
A function f is continuous if and only if, for each point x0 in the domain, limn→∞f(xn)=f(x0), whenever limn→∞xn=x0. This is equivalent to the statement that (f(xn)) is a convergent sequence whenever (xn) is convergent. The concept of slowly oscillating continuity is defined in the sense that a function f is slowly oscillating continuous if it transforms slowly oscillating sequences to slowly oscillating sequences, that is, (f(xn)) is slowly oscillating whenever (xn) is slowly oscillating. A sequence (xn) of points in R is slowly oscillating if limλ→1+lim―nmaxn+1≤k≤[λn]|xk-xn|=0, where [λn] denotes the integer part of λn. Using ɛ>0's and δ's, this is equivalent to the case when, for any given ɛ>0, there exist δ=δ(ɛ)>0 and N=N(ɛ) such that |xm−xn|<ɛ if n≥N(ɛ) and n≤m≤(1+δ)n. A new type compactness is also defined and some new results related to compactness are obtained.