Step 1: Understanding the set and limit points.
The set given is \( \left\{ \frac{n}{\sqrt{2}} + \frac{\sqrt{2}}{n} : n \in \mathbb{N} \right\} \), where each term involves \( n \), and as \( n \) increases, the terms approach \( \sqrt{2} \). This suggests that \( S \), the set of limit points, will include \( \sqrt{2} \), which is irrational.
Step 2: Analyzing the options.
- (A) \( \mathbb{Q}_+ \subset S \): This is incorrect because the limit points are irrational, and \( \mathbb{Q}_+ \) consists of positive rationals. Thus, \( \mathbb{Q}_+ \) is not a subset of \( S \).
- (B) \( S \subset \mathbb{Q}_+ \): This is incorrect, as the limit points include \( \sqrt{2} \), which is irrational, so \( S \) is not a subset of \( \mathbb{Q}_+ \).
- (C) \( S \cap (\mathbb{R} \setminus \mathbb{Q}_+) \neq \emptyset \): This is correct because \( S \) contains the irrational number \( \sqrt{2} \), meaning it intersects with real numbers that are not positive rationals.
- (D) \( S \cap \mathbb{Q}_+ \neq \emptyset \): This is incorrect because the limit points of the given sequence are irrational, and thus there is no intersection with \( \mathbb{Q}_+ \).
Step 3: Conclusion.
The correct answer is (C) \( S \cap (\mathbb{R} \setminus \mathbb{Q}_+) \neq \emptyset \), as the limit points of the sequence include irrational numbers like \( \sqrt{2} \).