This is one of three sets of fixed point exercises. The first post in this sequence is here, giving context.
1. (1-D Sperner's lemma) Consider a path built out of edges as shown. Color each vertex blue or green such that the leftmost vertex is blue and the rightmost vertex is green. Show that an odd number of the edges will be bichromatic.

2. (Intermediate value theorem) The Bolzano-Weierstrass theorem states that any bounded sequence in has a convergent subsequence. The intermediate value theorem states that if you have a continuous function such that and , then there exists an such that . Prove the intermediate value theorem. It may be helpful later on if your proof uses 1-D Sperner's lemma and the Bolzano-Weierstrass theorem
3. (1-D Brouwer fixed point theorem) Show that any continuous function has a fixed point (i.e. a point with ). Why is this not true for the open interval ?
4. (2-D Sperner's lemma) Consider a triangle built out of smaller triangles as shown. Color each vertex red, blue, or green, such that none of the vertices on the large bottom edge are red, none of the vertices on the large left edge are green, and none of the vertices on the large right edge are blue. Show that an odd number of the small triangles will be trichromatic.

5. Color the all the points in the disk as shown. Let be a continuous function from a closed triangle to the disk, such that the bottom edge is sent to non-red points, the left edge is sent to non-green points, and the right edge is sent to non-blue points. Show that sends some point in the triangle to the center.

6. Show that any continuous function from closed triangle to itself has a fixed point.
7. (2-D Brouwer fixed point theorem) Show that any continuous function from a compact convex subset of to itself has a fixed point. (You may use the fact that given any closed convex subset of , the function from to which projects each point to the nearest point in is well defined and continuous.)
8. Reflect on how non-constructive all of the above fixed-point findings are. Find a parameterized class of functions where for each , , and the function is continuous, but there is no continuous way to pick out a single fixed point from each function (i.e. no continuous function such that is a fixed point of for all ).
9. (Sperner's lemma) Generalize exercises 1 and 4 to an arbitrary dimension simplex.
10. (Brouwer fixed point theorem) Show that any continuous function from a compact convex subset of to itself has a fixed point.
11. Given two nonempty compact subsets , the Hausdorff distance between them is the supremum
over all points in either subset of the distance from that point to the other subset. We call a set valued function a continuous Hausdorff limit if there is a sequence of continuous functions from to whose graphs, , converge to the graph of , , in Hausdorff distance. Show that every continuous Hausdorff limit from a compact convex subset of to itself has a fixed point (a point such that ).
12. Let and be nonempty compact convex subsets of . We say that a set valued function, is a Kakutani function if the graph of , , is closed, and is convex and nonempty for all . For example, we could take and to be the interval , and we could have send each to , map to the whole interval , and map to . Show that every Kakutani function is a continuous Hausdorff limit. (Hint: Start with the case where is a unit cube. Construct by breaking into small cubes of side length . Constuct a smaller cube of side length within each cube. Send each small to the convex hull of the images of all points in the cube with a continuous function, and glue these together with straight lines. Make sure you don't accidentally get extra limit points.)
13. (Kakutani fixed point theorem) Show that every Kakutani function from a compact convex subset of to itself has a fixed point.
Please use the spoilers feature - the symbol '>' followed by '!' followed by space -in your comments to hide all solutions, partial solutions, and other discussions of the math. The comments will be moderated strictly to hide spoilers!
I recommend putting all the object level points in spoilers and leaving metadata outside of the spoilers, like so: "I think I've solved problem #5, here's my solution <spoilers>" or "I'd like help with problem #3, here's what I understand <spoilers>" so that people can choose what to read.
I am sorry because I cannot figure out how to hide big formulas in a spoiler. Also the spoiler feature is somewhat broken so it adds weird tabs around formulas.
#1:
Let's count the number of blue edge ends. Each blue point inside the segment is the end of two blue edges, and the leftmost blue vertex is the end of one. Therefore, their total number is odd. On the other hand, each bichromatic edge produces one blue edge end, and each unichromatic edge produces an odd number - zero or two - of blue edge ends. Therefore, an odd number of edges are bichromatic.
#2:
Suppose x=inf{y∈[0,1]|f(y)≥0} . If f(x)>0 then x≠0and, since f is continuous, f stays positive in some neighborhood of x, and then x is not the infimum. Therefore, f(x) = 0.
#3:
Consider the function g(x)=f(x)−x . Since g(0)≥0 and g(1)≤0 by exercise 2, there should be a point where g(x) = 0.
#8.
Consider the family of functions: ft(x)=min(max(x−t+0.5,0),1)
For t < 0.5, the only fixed point is of ft is 1; for t > 0.5, the only fixed point is 0.
#9.
Lemma:
Suppose a k-dimensional simplex is subdivided into smaller k-dimensional simplices and all vertices are colored into k+1 colors so that there are no vertices of color i on the i-th edge of the big simplex. Then there are an odd number of subdivision simplices whose vertices are colored in k+1 different colors.
Proof:
Induction by k. Base k=1 proved in exercise 1.
Induction step: supposed the lemma is proved for k-1, let's prove it for k.
Let us count the number of tuples (X, Y) where X is a k-1-dimensional simplex colored in colors 0, 1, ..., k-1,
Y is a k-dimensional subdivision simplex, and X is on the boundary of Y. Each properly colored simplex X inside the big simplex produces two tuples, and each simplex on the boundary produces one tuple. X can only be on the k-th edge of the big simplex, and by the inductional assumption, there are an odd number of simplices X there. So, the total number of tuples is odd. On the other hand, each k-dimensional simplex Y can be a part of either:
0 tuples;
1 tuple if all his vertices are different;
2 tuples if has vertices of colors 0,1,...,k-1 but not all his vertices are different.
Therefore, a number of k-simplices Y with all different vertices must be odd.
#4
Follows from 9
#5
Suppose that center is not in the image of the triangle. Let us call a set of points bichromatic if it doesn't have points of all three colors. We color each point in the triangle in the same color as its image. Then every point in the image has an open bichromatic neighborhood. Since the map is continuous, the preimage of this neighborhood is also open. So, around every point in the triangle there can be drawn an open bichromatic ball of radius r. These balls are an open cover of the triangle, let us choose a finite subcover out of them. Suppose ϵs the minimum radius in this subcover. Split the triangle into subtriangles so that the diameter of each triangle is smaller than ϵ/2 By Sperner's lemma, there is a trichromatic triangle, but since its diameter is smaller than ϵ/2 it lies completely inside one of the bichromatic balls. Contradiction.
#10
First, I am going to prove that a function from a unit ball Dno itself has a fixed point, then that any compact convex subset of Rns homeomorphic to a ball.
Suppose that f:Dn→Dnas no fixed point, n>1 (case n=1 was proved in exercise 3). Then I can build a retraction from Dnnto its boundary Sn−1
send x to the first intersection of the ray (f(x), x) with Sn−1 Let us prove that such a rectraction cannot exist. Suppose that such a rectraction g exists. Denote i:Sn−1→Dnthe inclusion map. Then g∘i=idnd the induced homology group homorphism g∗∘i∗ust also be identity: Hn−1(Sn−1)→i∗Hn−1(Dn)→g∗Hn−1(Sn−1)
But this is impossible because Hn−1(Sn−1)=Z and Hn−1(Dn)=0
Now let us prove that any compact convex subset X of Rns homeomorphic to a ball. Let us select a maximum set of affinely independent points in X. They form some k-dimensional simplex, all X lies in the affine space spanned by this simplex, and all the interior of this simplex belongs to X, because X is convex. I'll take a ball Dkf radius d side this simplex and build a homeomorphism between X and Dk. Taking the center of the ball as the center of coordinates, define
f(x)=x∗d/r(x)) where r(x)=r(||x||)s the distance to the farthest point of X in the x direction, if x≠0, 0 if
Let us prove that f and its inverse are continuous. Since X is compact, it is bounded, so there is a R>0 such that r(x)≤R It follows that f and its inverse f−1(x)=x∗r(x)/d are continuous in zero: ∀ϵ>0 if |x|<R/d∗ϵ |f(x)|<ϵ ∀ϵ>0 if |x|<d/R∗ϵ|f−1(x)|<ϵ.
Now let us prove that functions are continuous in all other points. It is sufficient to prove that r(x) is the continuous on the unit sphere. (Since composition and product of continuous functions is continuous, division by bounded from below (by d) continuous function r is continuous, ||x|| is a continuous function).
Since X is convex, the tangent cone from any point of X to Dk lies in X. So if we take a point at the distance R from the center, draw a tangent cone, and go down its boundary, we get the steepest possible rate of change of r(x) with respect to x. Therefore, r is continuous.
#6, #7: follow from #10.
#11:
Suppose f has no fixed point. Distance d(a, B) is a continuous function of a, and a continuous function reaches its minimum on a compact. TxT and the graph of f are nonitersecting compact sets, therefore the Hausdorff distance δ between them is positive. It is easy to see that Hausdorff metric is indeed a metric, i.e. that a triangle inequality holds for it. So if we take any continuous function g at a distance less than δ from f, its Hausdorff distance to TxT will be positive, so it can have no fixed points.
#13:
Suppose h:S→2S is a Kakutani function. We already know that any compact convex subset of Rns homeomorphic to a simplex. Denote g:T→She homeomorphism between a simplex T and S.
Denote yk1,…,ykt the k-th barithentric subdivision of T. For each yki, choose an element hki∈h(g(yki))
Define fk(x) ∑n+1i=1pki(g−1(x))hki where pki are the baricentric coordinates of point g−1(x)n its subdivision simplex. Function fks continuous, fk(g(yki))=hki and, since S is convex, the image offk lies in S.
By the Brouwer fixed point theorem, fkas a fixed point. Since S is compact, from the infinite sequence of fixed points of fke can choose a convergent subsequence.
Suppose xk→x∗s this subsequence, g−1(xk) lies in the simplex yk1,…,ykn+1and has baricentric coordinates pk1,…,pkn+1. Then g−1(xk)=∑pkiyki and fk(xk)=∑pkihkiso
g−1(∑pkihki)=∑pkiyki (1).
Since simplices go down in diameter, g(yki)→x∗as xk→x∗ Each pki∈[0,1]s a bounded sequence, so we can, sequentially, choose a convergent subsequence out of each of them, so we can assume that pki→p∗i Similarly, we can choose a convergent subsequence out of hki so we assume hki→h∗i The sequence (g(yki),hki) belongs to the graph of h and converges to the point (x∗,h∗i) Since the graph is closed, h∗i must belong to the image of x∗ Since ∑pki=1 for every k, ∑p∗i=1.ince the image is convex, ∑p∗ih∗ilso belongs to the image of x∗ On the other hand, as we remember, since equality (1) held for every k, it also holds in the limit: g−1(∑p∗ih∗i)=∑p∗ig−1(x∗). Hence, ∑p∗ih∗i=x∗ So, x∗ is the fixed point of h.
Thank you!