I'm having trouble understanding what makes a family fine. My book's definition says:
The family F is fine when, for each positive rational epsilon, there is an interval in F that has length less than epsilon.
We're also given the example that [1/n[sup:3pe35oh8]2[/sup:3pe35oh8] , 3/n] , n=1,2,... is fine because if we choose n so that n>3/epsilon the interval will have length less than epsilon.
I don't understand how to figure out whether or not an interval is fine. What would be the difference between a fine and a non-fine interval?
I'd really appreciate some help.
The family F is fine when, for each positive rational epsilon, there is an interval in F that has length less than epsilon.
We're also given the example that [1/n[sup:3pe35oh8]2[/sup:3pe35oh8] , 3/n] , n=1,2,... is fine because if we choose n so that n>3/epsilon the interval will have length less than epsilon.
I don't understand how to figure out whether or not an interval is fine. What would be the difference between a fine and a non-fine interval?
I'd really appreciate some help.