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| Finally, since <math>\tilde{A}_\epsilon </math> is measurable, using HW5 problem 6 there exists a closed set <math>A_\epsilon\subset \tilde{A}_\epsilon </math> such that <math>\mu(\tilde{A}_\epsilon\setminus A_\epsilon)<\frac{\epsilon}{2} </math>. Therefore <math> \mu(E\setminus A_\epsilon)<\epsilon </math> and <math> f_n \rightarrow f </math> on <math> A_\epsilon </math> | | Finally, since <math>\tilde{A}_\epsilon </math> is measurable, using HW5 problem 6 there exists a closed set <math>A_\epsilon\subset \tilde{A}_\epsilon </math> such that <math>\mu(\tilde{A}_\epsilon\setminus A_\epsilon)<\frac{\epsilon}{2} </math>. Therefore <math> \mu(E\setminus A_\epsilon)<\epsilon </math> and <math> f_n \rightarrow f </math> on <math> A_\epsilon </math> |
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| | ==Corollary== |
| | |
| ==References== | | ==References== |
Revision as of 20:07, 7 December 2020
Statement
Suppose
is a locally finite Borel measure and
is a sequence of measurable functions defined on a measurable set
with
and
a.e. on E.
Then:
Given
we may find a closed subset
such that
and
uniformly on
[1]
Proof
WLOG assume
for all
since the set of points at which
is a null set. Fix
and for
we define
. Since
are measurable so is their difference. Then since the absolute value of a measurable function is measurable each
is measurable.
Now for fixed
we have that
and
. Therefore using continuity from below we may find a
such that
.
Now choose
so that
and define
. By countable subadditivity we have that
.
Fix any
. We choose
such that
. Since
if
then
. And by definition if
then
whenever
. Hence
uniformly on
.
Finally, since
is measurable, using HW5 problem 6 there exists a closed set
such that
. Therefore
and
on
Corollary
References
- ↑ Stein & Shakarchi, Real Analysis: Measure Theory, Integration, and Hilbert Spaces, Chapter 1 §4.3