Lower semicontinuous functions: Difference between revisions

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==Properties==
==Related Properties==
*If<math> f</math> is lower semicontinuous and <math> c \in [0, +\infty) </math> the <math> cf</math> is lower semicontinuous.<ref name="Folland">Gerald B. Folland, ''Real Analysis: Modern Techniques and Their Applications, second edition'', §7.2 </ref>
 
*If <math> X </math> is a topological space and <math> U \subset X </math> is any open set, then <math> 1_U </math> is lower semicontinuous.<ref name="Folland">Gerald B. Folland, ''Real Analysis: Modern Techniques and Their Applications, second edition'', §7.2 </ref>
 
*If <math> f_1, f_2 </math> are lower semicontinuous, then <math> f_1+f_2 </math> is lower semicontinuous.<ref name="Folland">Gerald B. Folland, ''Real Analysis: Modern Techniques and Their Applications, second edition'', §7.2 </ref>
 
*If <math> X </math> is a locally compact Hausdorff space, and <math> f:X \to \mathbb{R} \cup \{+\infty\} </math> is lower semicontinuous, then <math> f(x) = \sup \{g(x) : g \in C_c(X), 0 \leq g \leq f \} </math> where <math> C_c(X) </math> denotes the space of all continuous functions on <math> X </math> with compact support.<ref name="Folland">Gerald B. Folland, ''Real Analysis: Modern Techniques and Their Applications, second edition'', §7.2 </ref>
 
*If <math> \{x_n\}_{n \in \mathbb{N}} </math> is an convergent sequence in <math>X </math> converging to some <math>x_0 </math>, then <math>f(x_0) \leq \liminf_{n \to \infty} f(x_n)  </math>.<ref name="Craig">Craig, Katy. ''MATH 201A HW 1''. UC Santa Barbara, Fall 2020.</ref>
*If <math> \{x_n\}_{n \in \mathbb{N}} </math> is an convergent sequence in <math>X </math> converging to some <math>x_0 </math>, then <math>f(x_0) \leq \liminf_{n \to \infty} f(x_n)  </math>.<ref name="Craig">Craig, Katy. ''MATH 201A HW 1''. UC Santa Barbara, Fall 2020.</ref>


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*In the case that <math> X = \mathbb{R} </math>, <math> f </math> is Borel-measurable. <ref name="Craig1">Craig, Katy. ''MATH 201A HW 4''. UC Santa Barbara, Fall 2020.</ref>
*In the case that <math> X = \mathbb{R} </math>, <math> f </math> is Borel-measurable. <ref name="Craig1">Craig, Katy. ''MATH 201A HW 4''. UC Santa Barbara, Fall 2020.</ref>


*If <math> \mathcal{F} </math> is a collection of lower semicontinuous functions from <math> X </math> to <math> \mathbb{R}\cup \{+\infty\} </math>, then the function <math> h(x) \coloneqq \sup_{f \in \mathcal{F}} f(x) </math> is lower semicontinuous.<ref name="Craig2">Craig, Katy. ''MATH 201A HW 5''. UC Santa Barbara, Fall 2020.</ref>
*If <math> \mathcal{F} </math> is a collection of lower semicontinuous functions from <math> X </math> to <math> \mathbb{R}\cup \{+\infty\} </math>, then the function <math> h(x) := \sup_{f \in \mathcal{F}} f(x) </math> is lower semicontinuous.<ref name="Craig2">Craig, Katy. ''MATH 201A HW 5''. UC Santa Barbara, Fall 2020.</ref>
 
 





Latest revision as of 20:45, 10 December 2020

Let be a metric space (or more generally a topological space). A function is lower semicontinuous if

is open in for all .[1]


Related Properties

  • If is lower semicontinuous and the is lower semicontinuous.[2]
  • If is a topological space and is any open set, then is lower semicontinuous.[2]
  • If are lower semicontinuous, then is lower semicontinuous.[2]
  • If is a locally compact Hausdorff space, and is lower semicontinuous, then where denotes the space of all continuous functions on with compact support.[2]
  • If is an convergent sequence in converging to some , then .[1]
  • If is continuous, then it is lower semicontinuous. [1]
  • In the case that , is Borel-measurable. [3]
  • If is a collection of lower semicontinuous functions from to , then the function is lower semicontinuous.[4]



Lower Semicontinuous Envelope

Given any bounded function , the lower semicontinuous envelope of , denoted is the lower semicontinuous function defined as

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Craig, Katy. MATH 201A HW 1. UC Santa Barbara, Fall 2020.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Gerald B. Folland, Real Analysis: Modern Techniques and Their Applications, second edition, §7.2
  3. Craig, Katy. MATH 201A HW 4. UC Santa Barbara, Fall 2020.
  4. Craig, Katy. MATH 201A HW 5. UC Santa Barbara, Fall 2020.