Is The Banach Fixed Point Theorem True?

Calculus Level 3

Let ( M , d ) (M,d) be a complete metric space. A contraction is a function f : M M f: M \to M for which there exists some constant 0 < c < 1 0 < c < 1 such that d ( f ( x ) , f ( y ) ) < c d ( x , y ) d\big(f(x), f(y)\big) < c \cdot d(x,y) for all x , y M x, y \in M .

Answer the following yes-no questions:

  • If f : M M f: M \to M is a contraction, does f f have a fixed point? ( ( I.e., is there some x M x\in M such that f ( x ) = x ? ) f(x) = x?)

  • If f : M M f: M \to M has a fixed point, is f f a contraction?


Hint: The first question is much harder than the second. In fact, the answer is yes, and this extremely important result is known as the Banach fixed point theorem.

To prove it, choose an arbitrary x 0 M x_0 \in M and set x n = T ( x n 1 ) x_n = T(x_{n-1}) for n 1 n\ge 1 . Then, show that x n x_n converges to some x M x\in M and that x x is the desired fixed point.

No; No No; Yes Yes; No Yes; Yes

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1 solution

Otto Bretscher
Mar 24, 2016

As a simple counterexample for the second part, consider f ( x ) = 2 x f(x)=2x from R \mathbb{R} to R \mathbb{R} , with fixed point 0.

How about the first question?

Pi Han Goh - 5 years, 2 months ago

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Well, Sameer tells us that the first statement is true, and we can all look up a proof of the Banach fixed point theorem ;)

Otto Bretscher - 5 years, 2 months ago

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