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− | ''Also: analytic measurable space''
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− | [[:Category:Descriptive set theory]]
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− | [[:Category:Classical measure theory]]
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− | {{User:Rehmann/sandbox/MSC|03E15|28A05,54H05}}
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− | $ \newcommand{\R}{\mathbb R}
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− | \newcommand{\C}{\mathbb C}
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− | \newcommand{\Om}{\Omega}
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− | \newcommand{\A}{\mathcal A}
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− | \newcommand{\B}{\mathcal B}
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− | \newcommand{\P}{\mathbf P} $
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− | A [[measurable space|Borel space]] is called '''analytic''' if it is [[Measurable space#separated|countably separated]] and [[Measurable space#isomorphic|isomorphic]] to a [[Measurable space#quotient space|quotient space]] of a [[Standard Borel space|standard]] Borel space.
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− | See below for an equivalent definition.
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− | Finite and countable analytic Borel spaces are trivial: all subsets are measurable. Uncountable
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− | analytic Borel spaces are of [[Continuum, cardinality of the|cardinality continuum]]. Some, but not all, of them are standard; these are mutually isomorphic. Some additional (to [[ZFC]]) set-theoretic axioms imply that all nonstandard analytic Borel spaces are mutually isomorphic (see [1, Sect. 26.D]).
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− | ''Non-example.'' The [[quotient group]] $\R/\Q$ (real numbers modulo rational numbers, additive) may be thought of as a quotient measurable space, $\R$ being endowed with its Borel σ-algebra. Then $\R/\Q$ is a quotient space of a standard Borel space, but not an analytic Borel space, because it is not countably separated. (See [2, Sect. 5].)
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− | ====Relations to analytic sets====
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− | A subset of a standard Borel (or just countably separated measurable) space is called ''analytic'' if it is the image of a standard Borel space under a Borel map. (See [1, Sect. 14.A].)
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− | As every subset of a measurable space, an analytic set is itself a measurable space (a
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− | [[Measurable space#subspace|subspace]] of the given space).
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− | '''Definition 2''' (equivalent).
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− | A Borel space is called ''analytic'' if it is isomorphic to an analytic set.
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− | Equivalence of the two definitions follows from the [[Standard Borel space#Blackwell-Mackey theorem|Blackwell-Mackey theorem]] and the following simple fact: every countably separated measurable space admits a one-to-one measurable map to a standard Borel space.
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− | See [1, Sect. 25.A], [2, Sect. 4] for these, and some other, definitions of analytic sets and spaces.
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− | ====Measurable injections====
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− | Several [[Standard Borel space#Measurable injections|results on standard Borel spaces]] generalize to analytic Borel spaces (see [2, Sect. 4], [3, Sect. 4.5]).
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− | '''Theorem 1a.''' If a bijective map between analytic Borel spaces is measurable then the inverse map is also measurable.
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− | '''Theorem 1b.''' If σ-algebras $\A$, $\B$ on $X$ are such that $\A\subset\B$ and $(X,\A)$, $(X,\B)$ are analytic then $\A=\B$.
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− | ''Example.'' The real line with the Lebesgue σ-algebra is not analytic (by Theorem 1b).
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− | '''Theorem 2a.''' If a bijective map from an analytic Borel space to a countably separated measurable space is measurable then the inverse map is also measurable.
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− | '''Theorem 2b.''' If σ-algebras $\A$, $\B$ on $X$ are such that $\A\subset\B$, $(X,\A)$ is countably separated and $(X,\B)$ is analytic then $\A=\B$.
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− | '''Theorem 2c.''' If $(X,\A)$ is an analytic Borel space then $\A$ is generated by every at most countable [[Measurable space#separating|separating]] subset of $\A$.
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− | The Blackwell-Mackey theorem generalizes readily from standard to analytic spaces, since a quotient space of an analytic space evidently is also a quotient space of a standard space.
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− | ====References====
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− | {|
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− | |valign="top"|[1]|| Alexander S. Kechris, "Classical descriptive set theory", Springer-Verlag (1995). {{MR|1321597}} {{ZBL|0819.04002}}
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− | |valign="top"|[2]|| George W. Mackey, "Borel structure in groups and their duals", ''Trans. Amer. Math. Soc.'' '''85''' (1957), 134–165. {{MR|0089999}} {{ZBL|0082.11201}}
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− | |valign="top"|[3]|| S.M. Srivastava, "A course on Borel sets", Springer-Verlag (1998). {{MR|1619545}} {{ZBL|0903.28001}}
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− | |}
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