Difference between revisions of "User:Boris Tsirelson/sandbox1"
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|valign="top"|{{Ref|N}}|| Togo Nishiura, "Absolute measurable spaces", Cambridge (2008). {{MR|2426721}} {{ZBL|1151.54001}} | |valign="top"|{{Ref|N}}|| Togo Nishiura, "Absolute measurable spaces", Cambridge (2008). {{MR|2426721}} {{ZBL|1151.54001}} | ||
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+ | |valign="top"|{{Ref|C}}|| Donald L. Cohn, "Measure theory", Birkhäuser (1993). {{MR|1454121}} {{ZBL|}} | ||
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|valign="top"|{{Ref|P}}|| David Pollard, "A user's guide to measure theoretic probability", Cambridge (2002). {{MR|1873379}} {{ZBL|0992.60001}} | |valign="top"|{{Ref|P}}|| David Pollard, "A user's guide to measure theoretic probability", Cambridge (2002). {{MR|1873379}} {{ZBL|0992.60001}} |
Revision as of 08:47, 17 February 2012
$\newcommand{\Om}{\Omega} \newcommand{\A}{\mathcal A} \newcommand{\B}{\mathcal B} \newcommand{\M}{\mathcal M} $ The term "universally measurable" may be applied to
- a measurable space;
- a subset of a measurable space;
- a metric space.
Let $(X,\A)$ be a measurable space. A subset $A\subset X$ is called universally measurable if it is $\mu$-measurable for every finite measure $\mu$ on $(X,\A)$. In other words: $\mu_*(A)=\mu^*(A)$ where $\mu_*,\mu^*$ are the inner and outer measures for $\mu$, that is,
- $ \mu_*(A) = \max\{\mu(B):B\in\A,B\subset A\}\,,\quad \mu^*(A) = \min\{\mu(B):B\in\A,B\supset A\}\,.$
(See [S, p. 170].)
A separable metric space is called universally measurable if it is a universally measurable subset (as defined above) of its completion. Here the completion, endowed with the Borel σ-algebra, is treated as a measurable space. (See [S, p. 170], [D, Sect. 11.5].)
A measurable space is called universally measurable if it is isomorphic to some universally measurable metric space (as defined above) with the Borel σ-algebra. (See [S, p. 171].)
Theorem 1 (Shortt). A countably generated separated measurable space $(X,\A)$ is universally measurable if and only if for every finite measure $\mu$ on $(X,\A)$ there exists a subset $A\in\A$ of full measure (that is, $\mu(X\setminus A)=0$) such that $A$ (treated as a subspace) is itself a standard Borel space. ([S, Lemma 4])
Theorem 2 (Shortt). The following two conditions on a separable metric space are equivalent:
- (a) it is a universally measurable metric space;
- (b) the corresponding measurable space (with the Borel σ-algebra) is universally measurable.
Evidently, (a) implies (b); surprisingly, also (b) implies (a), which involves a Borel isomorphism (rather than isometry or homeomorphism) between two metric spaces.
References
[S] | Rae M. Shortt, "Universally measurable spaces: an invariance theorem and diverse characterizations", Fundamenta Mathematicae 121 (1984), 169–176. MR0765332 Zbl 0573.28018 |
[N] | Togo Nishiura, "Absolute measurable spaces", Cambridge (2008). MR2426721 Zbl 1151.54001 |
[C] | Donald L. Cohn, "Measure theory", Birkhäuser (1993). MR1454121 |
[P] | David Pollard, "A user's guide to measure theoretic probability", Cambridge (2002). MR1873379 Zbl 0992.60001 |
[K] | Alexander S. Kechris, "Classical descriptive set theory", Springer-Verlag (1995). MR1321597 Zbl 0819.04002 |
[BK] | Howard Becker and Alexander S. Kechris, "The descriptive set theory of Polish group actions", Cambridge (1996). MR1425877 Zbl 0949.54052 |
[D] | Richard M. Dudley, "Real analysis and probability", Wadsworth&Brooks/Cole (1989). MR0982264 Zbl 0686.60001 |
[M] | George W. Mackey, "Borel structure in groups and their duals", Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 85 (1957), 134–165. MR0089999 Zbl 0082.11201 |
[H] | Paul R. Halmos, "Measure theory", v. Nostrand (1950). MR0033869 Zbl 0040.16802 |
[R] | Walter Rudin, "Principles of mathematical analysis", McGraw-Hill (1953). MR0055409 Zbl 0052.05301 |
Boris Tsirelson/sandbox1. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Boris_Tsirelson/sandbox1&oldid=21120