Outer measures from functions #
Given an arbitrary function m : Set α → ℝ≥0∞ that sends ∅ to 0 we can define an outer
measure on α that on s is defined to be the infimum of ∑ᵢ, m (sᵢ) for all collections of sets
sᵢ that cover s. This is the unique maximal outer measure that is at most the given function.
Given an outer measure m, the Carathéodory-measurable sets are the sets s such that
for all sets t we have m t = m (t ∩ s) + m (t \ s). This forms a measurable space.
Main definitions and statements #
OuterMeasure.boundedByis the greatest outer measure that is at most the given function. If you know that the given function sends∅to0, thenOuterMeasure.ofFunctionis a special case.sInf_eq_boundedBy_sInfGenis a characterization of the infimum of outer measures.
References #
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outer_measure
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carath%C3%A9odory%27s_criterion
Tags #
outer measure, Carathéodory-measurable, Carathéodory's criterion
ofFunction of a set s is the infimum of ∑ᵢ, m (tᵢ) for all collections of sets
tᵢ that cover s.
ofFunction of a set s is the infimum of ∑ᵢ, m (tᵢ) for all collections of sets
tᵢ that cover s, with all tᵢ satisfying a predicate P such that m is infinite for sets
that don't satisfy P.
This is similar to ofFunction_apply, except that the sets tᵢ satisfy P.
The hypothesis m_top applies in particular to a function of the form extend m'.
If m u = ∞ for any set u that has nonempty intersection both with s and t, then
μ (s ∪ t) = μ s + μ t, where μ = MeasureTheory.OuterMeasure.ofFunction m m_empty.
E.g., if α is an (e)metric space and m u = ∞ on any set of diameter ≥ r, then this lemma
implies that μ (s ∪ t) = μ s + μ t on any two sets such that r ≤ edist x y for all x ∈ s
and y ∈ t.
Given any function m assigning measures to sets, there is a unique maximal outer measure μ
satisfying μ s ≤ m s for all s : Set α. This is the same as OuterMeasure.ofFunction,
except that it doesn't require m ∅ = 0.
Equations
- MeasureTheory.OuterMeasure.boundedBy m = MeasureTheory.OuterMeasure.ofFunction (fun (s : Set α) => ⨆ (_ : s.Nonempty), m s) ⋯
Instances For
If m u = ∞ for any set u that has nonempty intersection both with s and t, then
μ (s ∪ t) = μ s + μ t, where μ = MeasureTheory.OuterMeasure.boundedBy m.
E.g., if α is an (e)metric space and m u = ∞ on any set of diameter ≥ r, then this lemma
implies that μ (s ∪ t) = μ s + μ t on any two sets such that r ≤ edist x y for all x ∈ s
and y ∈ t.
Given a set of outer measures, we define a new function that on a set s is defined to be the
infimum of μ(s) for the outer measures μ in the collection. We ensure that this
function is defined to be 0 on ∅, even if the collection of outer measures is empty.
The outer measure generated by this function is the infimum of the given outer measures.
Equations
- MeasureTheory.OuterMeasure.sInfGen m s = ⨅ μ ∈ m, μ s
Instances For
The value of the Infimum of a nonempty set of outer measures on a set is not simply the minimum value of a measure on that set: it is the infimum sum of measures of countable set of sets that covers that set, where a different measure can be used for each set in the cover.
The value of the Infimum of a set of outer measures on a nonempty set is not simply the minimum value of a measure on that set: it is the infimum sum of measures of countable set of sets that covers that set, where a different measure can be used for each set in the cover.
The value of the Infimum of a nonempty family of outer measures on a set is not simply the minimum value of a measure on that set: it is the infimum sum of measures of countable set of sets that covers that set, where a different measure can be used for each set in the cover.
The value of the Infimum of a family of outer measures on a nonempty set is not simply the minimum value of a measure on that set: it is the infimum sum of measures of countable set of sets that covers that set, where a different measure can be used for each set in the cover.
The value of the Infimum of a nonempty family of outer measures on a set is not simply the minimum value of a measure on that set: it is the infimum sum of measures of countable set of sets that covers that set, where a different measure can be used for each set in the cover.
The value of the Infimum of a nonempty family of outer measures on a set is not simply the minimum value of a measure on that set: it is the infimum sum of measures of countable set of sets that covers that set, where a different measure can be used for each set in the cover.
This proves that Inf and restrict commute for outer measures, so long as the set of outer measures is nonempty.