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Let $f: \Bbb R \to \Bbb R $ be a continuous function such that $f(i) = 0 \ for \ all \ i \in \Bbb Z$. Then which of the following is true : -
A. Image(f) is closed in $\Bbb R$
B. Image(f) is open in $\Bbb R$
C. f is uniformly continuous
D. None of the above
For the correct option, look at the end of the question.
I tried to contradict the options by bringing examples(It was obviously the first step considering 'None of the above was' an option)
I wasn't able to think of a single function that contradicts either of the options. However, graphically I would say that these functions satisfy the hypothesis and contradict the options
(Image uploaded)
Here's what the functions are
1) Just like $sin x,$ the function touches 1 and -1. The major difference would be that this function touches the x-axis at all integral values and no where else.
2) The second graph touches the integers and zero and in each interval $(m,m+1)$, the graph's maximum and minimum value tend to increase slightly and they tend to +1 and -1 as $x \to \infty$ Thus, the function gets arbitrarily close to 1 and -1 without touching them.
3) The third graph is just like $x Sin(x)$. The difference is that this one touches the x-axis at integer values. With each interval $(m,m+1)$, our graph has its 'magnitude of difference' increasing.
Are my graphs correct? If they, can they explicitly be expressed as familiar functions? If not, which explicitly express-able examples can be used to contradict the first three options?
The correct answer is D
Source - Tata Institute of Fundamental Research Graduate Studies Exam 2016
By multiplying any polynomial $P(x)$ by $\sin^2(\pi x)$ (if you want to respect the sign of the polynomial, use $\sin(\pi x)$, if not), you can obtain those functions, which are (in radians):
Clic here for seeing the graph
The first is: $\sin(\pi x)$ (red)
The second one is almost : $\frac{x^2}{1+x^2}\sin(\pi x)$ (green) (I could not find a "nice" function here, thanks LutzL)
The third one is: $ax^2 \sin^2(\pi x)$ or $x \sin(\pi x)$ (blue)
Here is an example.