Modes of Convergence: Difference between revisions
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== Relevant Definitions<ref name="Craig">Craig, Katy. ''MATH 201A Lecture | == Relevant Definitions<ref name="Craig">Craig, Katy. ''MATH 201A Lecture 17''. UC Santa Barbara, Fall 2020.</ref>== | ||
Denote our measure space as <math> (X, \mathcal{M}, \mu) </math>. Note that a property p(x) holds for almost every <math>x \in X</math> if the set <math>\{x \in X: p(x) \text{ doesn't hold }\}</math> has measure zero. | Denote our measure space as <math> (X, \mathcal{M}, \mu) </math>. Note that a property p(x) holds for almost every <math>x \in X</math> if the set <math>\{x \in X: p(x) \text{ doesn't hold }\}</math> has measure zero. | ||
* A sequence of functions <math>f_n</math> converges pointwise if <math>f_n(x) \to f(x) </math> for all <math>x \in X </math> | * A sequence of functions <math>f_n</math> converges pointwise if <math>f_n(x) \to f(x) </math> for all <math>x \in X </math> |
Revision as of 07:44, 18 December 2020
Relevant Definitions[1]
Denote our measure space as . Note that a property p(x) holds for almost every if the set has measure zero.
- A sequence of functions converges pointwise if for all
- A sequence of functions converges uniformly if ,
- A sequence of measurable functions converges to pointwise almost everywhere if for almost every , or .
- A sequence of measurable functions converges in if
Relevant Properties
- through uniform Convergence through pointwise convergence pointwise a.e. convergence
- through convergence through pointwise a.e convergence up to a subsequence
- Pointwise a.e. convergence equipped with dominating function implies convergence.[2]