0% found this document useful (0 votes)
77 views3 pages

Problem 1: Part A

The document contains problems and solutions regarding measure theory. Problem 1 discusses the construction of an outer measure on a set E and shows E is measurable. Problem 2 shows any set in the measurable sets M is measurable with respect to the outer measure. Problem 3 constructs a measure on the rational numbers. Problem 4 proves any measurable set can be covered by a single interval up to a set of small measure.

Uploaded by

Mister Black
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
77 views3 pages

Problem 1: Part A

The document contains problems and solutions regarding measure theory. Problem 1 discusses the construction of an outer measure on a set E and shows E is measurable. Problem 2 shows any set in the measurable sets M is measurable with respect to the outer measure. Problem 3 constructs a measure on the rational numbers. Problem 4 proves any measurable set can be covered by a single interval up to a set of small measure.

Uploaded by

Mister Black
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 3

Problem 1

Part a
If E has infinite measure, then just take A = X.
Let E ⊂ X and let ǫ > 0. By the definition of the induced outer S measure

µ∗ , There exists a countable collection Aj of sets in A such that E ⊂ j=1 Aj
and ∞
X
µ0 (Aj ) ≤ µ∗ (E) + ǫ.
j=1
S∞
Let A = j=1 Aj . Then A is in Aσ , and
 

[
µ(A) = µ∗  Aj 
j=1

X
≤ µ∗ (Aj )
j=1
≤ µ∗ (E) + ǫ.

Part b
Let E ⊂ X be a µ∗ -measurable set with finite measure. For every integer j,
selectTBj to be a set in Aσ with E ⊂ Bj such that µ∗ (Bj ) ≤ µ∗ (E) + ǫ. Define

B = j=1 Bj . Then Bj ∈ Aσδ and E ⊂ B. Finally, B \ E is a subset of Bj \ E
for every j. Because E is µ∗ -measurable, it follows that µ∗ (Bj \ E) is at most
µ∗ (Bj ) − µ∗ (E), and therefore E has µ∗ -measure no more than 1j . Since this
holds for all j, it follows that µ∗ (B \ E) is equal to zero.
Conversely, Suppose E ⊂ X and B ∈ Aσδ with E ⊂ B and µ∗ (B \ E) = 0.
Let F be an arbitrary subset of X. We need to show that µ∗ (F ) ≥ µ∗ (F ∩
E) + µ∗ (F ∩ E c ). Note that we can write F ∩ B as (F ∩ (B \ E)) ∪ F ∩ E.
So by subadditivity, µ∗ (F ∩ B) ≤ µ∗ (F ∩ E) + µ∗ (F ∩ (B \ E)), and µ∗ (F ∩
(B \ E)) is zero by monotonicity and the fact that µ∗ (B \ E) is zero. Therefore,
µ∗ (F ∩ E) ≥ µ∗ (F ∩ B), and clearly µ∗ (F ∩ E c ) ≥ µ∗ (F ∩ B c ) by monotonicity.
So µ∗ (F ∩ E) + µ∗ (F ∩ E c ) ≥ µ∗ (F ∩ B) + µ∗ (F ∩ B c ) = µ∗ (F ), where the
last equality follows from the fact that B is a measurable set. Note that this
direction of the proof did not make use of the assumption that µ∗ (E) was finite.

Part c
By the second part of part b, we only need to show that, for any measurable
set E, there exists a set B ∈ Aσδ such that µ∗ (B \ E) = 0. Suppose µ0 is
a σ-finite measure, and cover X by a countable collection of sets X1 , X2 , . . . ,
in A. Then each µ∗ (E ∩ Xj ) is finite for each j, because E ∩ Xj is covered
by Xj ∈ A. Therefore, we can apply the result of part b to each E ∩ Xj to
arrive at sets Bj in Aσδ with µ∗ (Bj \ (E ∩ Xj )) = 0 and E ∩ Xj ⊂ Bj . Define

1
S∞
B = j=1 Bj . Each element of B \ E is an element of Bj \ (E ∩ Xj ) for some
j, so B \ E ⊂ ∞
S
j=1 Bj \ (E ∩ Xj ), and therefore B \ E has outer measure zero
by countable subadditivity.

Problem 2
Suppose that µ is a σ-finite measure. Let E ∈ M and consider a set of the
form E ∪ F such that F ⊂ N for some µ-measurable set N with µ(N ) = 0.
Then E ∪ N is a set in M = Mσδ such that µ(E) = µ∗ (E) ≤ µ∗ (E ∪ F ) ≤
µ∗ (E ∪ N ) = µ(E ∪ N ) = µ(E), so by part c of the previous problem, it follows
that E ∪ F is µ∗ -measurable, and therefore that any set in M is measurable
with respect to µ∗ .
Conversely, suppose that S is a µ∗ -measurable set. Then we can apply the
previous problem, part c to S c , which is also a µ∗ -measurable set. That is,
There exists a set B ∈ Mσδ = M such that µ∗ (B \ S c ) is equal to zero. Now,
consider the set B c ⊂ S. Note that S \ B c = S ∩ B is exactly the same set
as B \ S c . So B \ S c has outer measure zero and therefore S is a union of B c ,
which is µ-measurable, and S ∩ B, which has outer measure zero. Note that
any set of outer measure zero is a subset of a set of µ-measure zero by part a of
the previous problem- it must be contained in sets in M of arbitrarily small µ
measure and hence in a set of µ-measure zero.

Problem 3
Part a
We want to take advantage of proposition 1.7 in Folland. We need to show that
sets of the form (a, b]∩Q form an elementary family of subsets of Q. Clearly, the
empty set is of this form. Suppose I take E = (a1 , b1 ] ∩ Q and F = (a2 , b2 ] ∩ Q;
E ∩ F is the (possibly trivial) set (max(a1 , a2 ), min(b1 , b2 )] ∩ Q, which is of the
desired form. Finally, consider ((a, b] ∩ Q)c , where the complement is taken in
Q. If a and b are finite, this set is ((−∞, a] ∩ Q) ∪ ((b, ∞] ∩ Q) , which is a
union of 2 sets in the elementary family. A similar, but simpler, argument can
be applied if one of a, b = ∞. So the sets of the form (a, b] form an elementary
family; therefore, sets of finite unions of such sets form an algebra.

Part b
It’s enough to show that, for any x ∈ Q, the singleton set {x} is in the σ-
algebra generated by A. This is enough because any subset of Q is countable
and therefore a countable union of singletons.
Note that any singleton set {x} can be expressed as n=1 (x − n1 , x] ∩ Q.
T∞
This is a countable intersection of elements of A, and therefore in the σ-algebra
generated by A.

2
Part c
First, we must show that µ0 is a premeasure on A. Clearly µ0 (∅) = 0. Further-
more, countable additivity holds: any disjoint union of sets, not all of which
are empty, has measure ∞, and at least one such set in the union must have
measure ∞.
One extension µ1 of this premeasure to the power set of Q can be obtained
by defining µ1 (S) to be ∞ for any nonempty set S. This is clearly a measure
on the power set of Q for the same reasons µ0 is.
A different extension µ2 is given by the counting measure: each nonempty
set in A has infinitely many elements, so the counting measure on Q extends
the premeasure µ0 .
Of course, there are other extensions too; for example, you could take any
finite nonzero multiple of the counting measure.

Problem 4
We can assume that the Lebesgue measure of E is finite: if it is infinite, just
consider E ∩[a, a+1] for some a for which this intersection has positive Lebesgue
measure.
P For any ǫ > 0, there is a covering of E by intervals Ij such that
j m(Ij ) < m(E) + ǫ. Note that we can assume the intervals are essentially
disjoint: If there exist Ij , Ik with k > j such that m(Ij ∩ Ik ) ≥ 0, then we can
just replace Ik by Ik \ Ij and still cover E.
Now, we will apply a version of the pigeonhole principle: Given any nonneg-
ative numbers a1 , a2 , . . . an and b1 , b2 , . . . bn , we have that
a1 + a2 + . . . + an aj
≤ max .
b1 + b2 + . . . + bn bj

By taking a limit, this inequality can be seen to hold for infinite convergent
sums as well, with the max replacedPby a sup. Setting aj = m(Ij ∩ E) and
aj m(E)
bj = m(Ij ), we get that the fraction Pj is equal to
j bj m(E)+ǫ . So there exists a
a m(E) m(E)
j such that bjj ≥ m(E)+ǫ . This is sufficient to prove the result because m(E)+ǫ
can be made arbitrarily close to 1 by taking ǫ to be sufficiently small.
It may be worth mentioning that you can actually do this for an interval I
centered at almost every x ∈ E: This follows from a general principle called the
Lebesgue differentiation theorem.

You might also like