Theorems in real analysis

Zahorski theorem

In mathematics, Zahorski's theorem is a theorem of real analysis. It states that a necessary and sufficient condition for a subset of the real line to be the set of points of non-differentiability of a continuous real-valued function, is that it be the union of a Gδ set and a set of zero measure. This result was proved by in 1939 and first published in 1941. (Wikipedia).

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Zagier's conjecture on zeta(F,4) - Alexander Goncharov

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From playlist Mathematics

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Mark Sapir - The Tarski numbers of groups.

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From playlist T1-2014 : Random walks and asymptopic geometry of groups.

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Dimitri Zvonkine - On two ELSV formulas

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From playlist 4th Itzykson Colloquium - Moduli Spaces and Quantum Curves

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From playlist Number Theory

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Silvia Steila: An overview over least fixed points in weak set theories

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From playlist Workshop: "Proofs and Computation"

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From playlist Math and Statistics

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Weil conjectures 1 Introduction

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From playlist Algebraic geometry: extra topics

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From playlist Combinatorics

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What is the Riemann Hypothesis?

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From playlist Mathematics

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Calculus 1 (Stewart) Ep 22, Mean Value Theorem (Oct 28, 2021)

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From playlist Math 1171 (Calculus 1) Fall 2021

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From playlist Ergodic Theory and Dynamical Systems 2022

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From playlist Vector Calculus @ UNSW Sydney. Dr Chris Tisdell

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From playlist Math 3371 (Real analysis) Fall 2020

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From playlist Geometry

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From playlist Wolfram Physics Project Livestream Archive

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Johnathan Bush (7/8/2020): Borsuk–Ulam theorems for maps into higher-dimensional codomains

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From playlist AATRN 2020

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From playlist Worldwide Single-Variable Calculus for AP®

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From playlist Engineering Math: Vector Calculus and Partial Differential Equations

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From playlist Vector Calculus @ UNSW Sydney. Dr Chris Tisdell

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Extending differential forms and the Lipman-Zariski conjecture - Sándor Kovács

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From playlist Mathematics

Related pages

Real analysis | Mathematics