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| ==References== | | ==References== |
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| . | | Folland, Gerald B. (1999). Real Analysis: Modern Techniques and Their Applications, John Wiley and Sons, ISBN 0471317160, Second edition. |
| | Craig, Katy. MATH 201A Lecture 4. UC Santa Barbara, Fall 2020. |
| | Craig, Katy. MATH 201A Lecture 5. UC Santa Barbara, Fall 2020. |
Definition
Let
be a set and let
be a
-algebra. Tbe structure
is called a measurable space and each set in
is called a measurable set. A measure on
(also referred to simply as a measure on
if
is understood) is a function
that satisfies the following criteria:
,
- Let
be a disjoint sequence of sets such that each
. Then,
.
If the previous conditions are satisfied, the structure
is called a measure space.
Additional Terminology
Let
be a measure space.
- The measure
is called finite if
.
- Let
. If there exist
such that
and
(for all
), then
is
-finite for
.
- If
is
-finite for
, then
is called
-finite.
- Let
be the collection of all the sets in
with infinite
-measure. The measure
is called semifinite if there exists
such that
and
, for all
.
Properties
Let
be a measure space.
- Finite Additivity: Let
be a finite disjoint sequence of sets such that each
. Then,
. This follows directly from the defintion of measures by taking
.
- Monotonicity: Let
such that
. Then,
.
- Subadditivity: Let
. Then,
.
- Continuity from Below: Let
such that
. Then,
.
- Continuity from Above: Let
such that
and
for some
. Then,
.
Examples
- Let
be a non-empty set and
. Let
be any function from
to
. Given
, define
. Then, the function
defined by
is a measure. This measure has the following properties:
- The measure
is semifinite if and only if
for every
.
- The measure
is
-finite if and only if
is semifinite and
is countable for every
.
There are special cases of this measure that are frequently used:
- When fixing
, the resulting measure is referred to as the counting measure.
- Let
be fixed. By defining
, the resulting measure is referred to as the point mass measure or the Dirac measure.
- Let
be an uncountable set. Let
be the
-algebra of countable or co-cocountable sets of
. The function
defined as
is a measure.
- Let
be an infinite set. Let
. The function
defined as
is not a measure. To verify that it is not a measure, it is sufficient to take
, and note that
. In other words. the countable additivity property is not satisfied. However,
does satisfy the finite additivity property.
Complete Measures
Consider a measure space
. A set
is called a
-null set (or simply null set) if
. A property
holds
-almost everywhere (or simply almost everywhere) if
satisfies
and
.
A measure space
is called complete if
contains all subsets of its null sets. An incomplete measure space can be constructed by taking
and
with
. The set
is a null set in this case, but
.
Given an incomplete measure
, the following theorem guarantees that a complete measure space this measure space can be extended to a complete measure space
. The measure
is called the completion of
, and
is called the completion of
with respect to
.
Theorem Suppose that
is a measure space. Let
and
. Then,
is a
-algebra, and there is a unique extension
of
to a complate measure on
.
References
Folland, Gerald B. (1999). Real Analysis: Modern Techniques and Their Applications, John Wiley and Sons, ISBN 0471317160, Second edition.
Craig, Katy. MATH 201A Lecture 4. UC Santa Barbara, Fall 2020.
Craig, Katy. MATH 201A Lecture 5. UC Santa Barbara, Fall 2020.