In nonstandard analysis, a branch of mathematics, overspill (referred to as overflow by Goldblatt (1998, p. 129)) is a widely used proof technique. It is based on the fact that the set of standard N is not an internal set of the internal set * N of hyperinteger numbers.
By applying the induction principle for the standard integers N and the transfer principle we get the principle of internal induction:
For any internal subset A of * N, if
If N were an internal set, then instantiating the internal induction principle with N, it would follow N = * N which is known not to be the case.
The overspill principle has a number of useful consequences:
In particular:
The proof that the second fact implies the first uses overspill, since given a non-infinitesimal positive ε,
Applying overspill, we obtain a positive appreciable δ with the requisite properties.
These equivalent conditions express the property known in nonstandard analysis as S- continuity (or microcontinuity) of ƒ at x. S-continuity is referred to as an external property. The first definition is external because it involves quantification over standard values only. The second definition is external because it involves the external relation of being infinitesimal.
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