Definitions
Let
be a measure space. The measure
is said to be absolutely continuous with respect to the measure
if we have that
for
such that
(see [1]). In this case, we denote that
is absolutely continuous with respect to
by writing
.
Examples
Recall that if
is a measurable function, then the set function
for
is a measure on
. Observe that if
, then
so that
.
Properties
It was previously established on a homework problem that for some nonnegative measurable
defined on the measure space
and some arbitrarily chosen
, there exists
such that
whenever
(see [2]). The method that was used to establish this result can also be used to show that, in a finite measure space, if
, then for some arbitrarily chosen
, there exists
such that
whenever
.
- In particular, we proceed by contradiction and suppose there exists
so that for any
and
, we have
. Now, define a sequence of sets Failed to parse (SVG (MathML can be enabled via browser plugin): Invalid response ("Math extension cannot connect to Restbase.") from server "https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/":): {\displaystyle {T_n}_{n\in \mathbb{N}\subseteq \mathcal{M}}
such that
and denote
where
.
References
[1]: Taylor, M. "Measure Theory and Integration". 50-51.
[2]: Craig, K. "Math 201a: Homework 8". Refer to question 2.