Lebesgue integral
The most important generalization of the concept of an integral. Let be a space with a non-negative complete countably-additive measure
(cf. Countably-additive set function; Measure space), where
. A simple function is a measurable function
that takes at most a countable set of values:
,
for
, if
,
. A simple function
is said to be summable if the series
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converges absolutely (cf. Absolutely convergent series); the sum of this series is the Lebesgue integral
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A function is summable on
,
, if there is a sequence of simple summable functions
uniformly convergent (cf. Uniform convergence) to
on a set of full measure, and if the limit
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is finite. The number is the Lebesgue integral
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This is well-defined: the limit exists and does not depend on the choice of the sequence
. If
, then
is a measurable almost-everywhere finite function on
. The Lebesgue integral is a linear non-negative functional on
with the following properties:
1) if and if
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then and
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2) if , then
and
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3) if ,
and
is measurable, then
and
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4) if and
is measurable, then
and
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In the case when and
,
, the Lebesgue integral is defined as
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under the condition that this limit exists and is finite for any sequence such that
,
,
. In this case the properties 1), 2), 3) are preserved, but condition 4) is violated.
For the transition to the limit under the Lebesgue integral sign see Lebesgue theorem.
If is a measurable set in
, then the Lebesgue integral
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is defined either as above, by replacing by
, or as
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where is the characteristic function of
; these definitions are equivalent. If
, then
for any measurable
. If
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if is measurable for every
, if
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and if , then
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Conversely, if under these conditions on one has
for every
and if
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then and the previous equality is true (
-additivity of the Lebesgue integral).
The function of sets given by
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is absolutely continuous with respect to (cf. Absolute continuity); if
, then
is a non-negative measure that is absolutely continuous with respect to
. The converse assertion is the Radon–Nikodým theorem.
For functions the name "Lebesgue integral" is applied to the corresponding functional if the measure
is the Lebesgue measure; here, the set of summable functions is denoted simply by
, and the integral by
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For other measures this functional is called a Lebesgue–Stieltjes integral.
If ,
and if
is a non-decreasing absolutely continuous function, then
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If ,
and if
is monotone on
, then
and there is a point
such that
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(the second mean-value theorem).
In 1902 H. Lebesgue gave (see [1]) a definition of the integral for and measure
equal to the Lebesgue measure. He constructed simple functions that uniformly approximate almost-everywhere on a set
of finite measure a measurable non-negative function
, and proved the existence of a common limit (finite or infinite) of the integrals of these simple functions as they tend to
. The Lebesgue integral is a basis for various generalizations of the concept of an integral. As N.N. Luzin remarked [2], property 2), called absolute integrability, distinguishes the Lebesgue integral for
from all possible generalized integrals.
References
[1] | H. Lebesgue, "Leçons sur l'intégration et la récherche des fonctions primitives" , Gauthier-Villars (1928) |
[2] | N.N. Luzin, "The integral and trigonometric series" , Moscow-Leningrad (1915) (In Russian) (Thesis; also: Collected Works, Vol. 1, Moscow, 1953, pp. 48–212) |
[3] | A.N. Kolmogorov, S.V. Fomin, "Elements of the theory of functions and functional analysis" , 1–2 , Graylock (1957–1961) (Translated from Russian) |
Comments
For other generalizations of the notion of an integral see -integral; Bochner integral; Boks integral; Burkill integral; Daniell integral; Darboux sum; Denjoy integral; Kolmogorov integral; Perron integral; Perron–Stieltjes integral; Pettis integral; Radon integral; Stieltjes integral; Strong integral; Wiener integral. See also, of course, Riemann integral. See also Double integral; Improper integral; Fubini theorem (on changing the order of integration).
References
[a1] | P.R. Halmos, "Measure theory" , v. Nostrand (1950) |
[a2] | I.N. Pesin, "Classical and modern integration theories" , Acad. Press (1970) (Translated from Russian) |
[a3] | S. Saks, "Theory of the integral" , Hafner (1952) (Translated from French) |
[a4] | H.L. Royden, "Real analysis" , Macmillan (1968) |
[a5] | W. Rudin, "Real and complex analysis" , McGraw-Hill (1978) pp. 24 |
[a6] | E. Hewitt, K.R. Stromberg, "Real and abstract analysis" , Springer (1965) |
Lebesgue integral. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Lebesgue_integral&oldid=18585