Measure (Mathematics) : Examples Basic Properties
Measure (Mathematics) : Examples Basic Properties
Measure (mathematics)
In mathematical analysis, a measure on a set is a systematic way to assign
a number to each suitable subset of that set, intuitively interpreted as its
size. In this sense, a measure is a generalization of the concepts of length,
area, and volume. A particularly important example is the Lebesgue
measure on a Euclidean space, which assigns the conventional length, area,
and volume of Euclidean geometry to suitable subsets of the n-dimensional
Euclidean space Rn. For instance, the Lebesgue measure of the interval
[0, 1] in the real numbers is its length in the everyday sense of the word,
specifically, 1.
Measure theory was developed in successive stages during the late 19th and early 20th centuries by Émile Borel, Henri
Lebesgue, Johann Radon, and Maurice Fréchet, among others. The main applications of measures are in the
foundations of the Lebesgue integral, in Andrey Kolmogorov's axiomatisation of probability theory and in ergodic
theory. In integration theory, specifying a measure allows one to define integrals on spaces more general than subsets
of Euclidean space; moreover, the integral with respect to the Lebesgue measure on Euclidean spaces is more general
and has a richer theory than its predecessor, the Riemann integral. Probability theory considers measures that assign
to the whole set the size 1, and considers measurable subsets to be events whose probability is given by the measure.
Ergodic theory considers measures that are invariant under, or arise naturally from, a dynamical system.
Contents
Definition
Examples
Basic properties
Monotonicity
Measure of countable unions and intersections
Subadditivity
Continuity from below
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Sigma-finite measures
s-finite measures
Completeness
Additivity
Non-measurable sets
Generalizations
See also
References
Bibliography
External links
Definition
Let X be a set and Σ a σ-algebra over X. A function μ from Σ
to the extended real number line is called a measure if it
satisfies the following properties:
One may require that at least one set E has finite measure. Then the empty set automatically has measure zero because
of countable additivity, because
which implies (since the sum on the right thus converges to a finite value) that .
If only the second and third conditions of the definition of measure above are met, and μ takes on at most one of the
values ±∞, then μ is called a signed measure.
The pair (X, Σ) is called a measurable space, the members of Σ are called measurable sets. If and
are two measurable spaces, then a function is called measurable if for every Y-measurable set ,
the inverse image is X-measurable – i.e.: . In this setup, the composition of measurable functions is
measurable, making the measurable spaces and measurable functions a category, with the measurable spaces as
objects and the set of measurable functions as arrows. See also Measurable function#Term usage variations about
another setup.
A triple (X, Σ, μ) is called a measure space. A probability measure is a measure with total measure one – i.e. μ(X) = 1.
A probability space is a measure space with a probability measure.
For measure spaces that are also topological spaces various compatibility conditions can be placed for the measure
and the topology. Most measures met in practice in analysis (and in many cases also in probability theory) are Radon
measures. Radon measures have an alternative definition in terms of linear functionals on the locally convex space of
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continuous functions with compact support. This approach is taken by Bourbaki (2004) and a number of other
sources. For more details, see the article on Radon measures.
Examples
Some important measures are listed here.
In physics an example of a measure is spatial distribution of mass (see e.g., gravity potential), or another non-negative
extensive property, conserved (see conservation law for a list of these) or not. Negative values lead to signed measures,
see "generalizations" below.
Liouville measure, known also as the natural volume form on a symplectic manifold, is useful in classical
statistical and Hamiltonian mechanics.
Gibbs measure is widely used in statistical mechanics, often under the name canonical ensemble.
Basic properties
Let μ be a measure.
Monotonicity
If E1 and E2 are measurable sets with E1 ⊆ E2 then
Subadditivity
For any countable sequence E1, E2, E3, ... of (not necessarily disjoint) measurable sets En in Σ:
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This property is false without the assumption that at least one of the En has finite measure. For instance, for each
n ∈ N, let En = [n, ∞) ⊂ R, which all have infinite Lebesgue measure, but the intersection is empty.
Sigma-finite measures
A measure space (X, Σ, μ) is called finite if μ(X) is a finite real number (rather than ∞). Nonzero finite measures are
analogous to probability measures in the sense that any finite measure μ is proportional to the probability measure
. A measure μ is called σ-finite if X can be decomposed into a countable union of measurable sets of finite
measure. Analogously, a set in a measure space is said to have a σ-finite measure if it is a countable union of sets with
finite measure.
For example, the real numbers with the standard Lebesgue measure are σ-finite but not finite. Consider the closed
intervals [k, k+1] for all integers k; there are countably many such intervals, each has measure 1, and their union is the
entire real line. Alternatively, consider the real numbers with the counting measure, which assigns to each finite set of
reals the number of points in the set. This measure space is not σ-finite, because every set with finite measure contains
only finitely many points, and it would take uncountably many such sets to cover the entire real line. The σ-finite
measure spaces have some very convenient properties; σ-finiteness can be compared in this respect to the Lindelöf
property of topological spaces. They can be also thought of as a vague generalization of the idea that a measure space
may have 'uncountable measure'.
s-finite measures
A measure is said to be s-finite if it is a countable sum of bounded measures. S-finite measures are more general than
sigma-finite ones and have applications in the theory of stochastic processes.
Completeness
A measurable set X is called a null set if μ(X) = 0. A subset of a null set is called a negligible set. A negligible set need
not be measurable, but every measurable negligible set is automatically a null set. A measure is called complete if every
negligible set is measurable.
A measure can be extended to a complete one by considering the σ-algebra of subsets Y which differ by a negligible set
from a measurable set X, that is, such that the symmetric difference of X and Y is contained in a null set. One defines
μ(Y) to equal μ(X).
Additivity
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Measures are required to be countably additive. However, the condition can be strengthened as follows. For any set
and any set of nonnegative define:
That is, we define the sum of the to be the supremum of all the sums of finitely many of them.
A measure on is -additive if for any and any family of disjoint sets the following hold:
Note that the second condition is equivalent to the statement that the ideal of null sets is -complete.
Non-measurable sets
If the axiom of choice is assumed to be true, it can be proved that not all subsets of Euclidean space are Lebesgue
measurable; examples of such sets include the Vitali set, and the non-measurable sets postulated by the Hausdorff
paradox and the Banach–Tarski paradox.
Generalizations
For certain purposes, it is useful to have a "measure" whose values are not restricted to the non-negative reals or
infinity. For instance, a countably additive set function with values in the (signed) real numbers is called a signed
measure, while such a function with values in the complex numbers is called a complex measure. Measures that take
values in Banach spaces have been studied extensively.[2] A measure that takes values in the set of self-adjoint
projections on a Hilbert space is called a projection-valued measure; these are used in functional analysis for the
spectral theorem. When it is necessary to distinguish the usual measures which take non-negative values from
generalizations, the term positive measure is used. Positive measures are closed under conical combination but not
general linear combination, while signed measures are the linear closure of positive measures.
Another generalization is the finitely additive measure, also known as a content. This is the same as a measure except
that instead of requiring countable additivity we require only finite additivity. Historically, this definition was used
first. It turns out that in general, finitely additive measures are connected with notions such as Banach limits, the dual
of L∞ and the Stone–Čech compactification. All these are linked in one way or another to the axiom of choice. Contents
remain useful in certain technical problems in geometric measure theory; this is the theory of Banach measures.
See also
Abelian von Neumann algebra Geometric measure theory
Almost everywhere Hausdorff measure
Carathéodory's extension theorem Inner measure
Content (measure theory) Lebesgue integration
Fubini's theorem Lebesgue measure
Fatou's lemma Lorentz space
Fuzzy measure theory Lifting theory
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References
1. Halmos, Paul (1950), Measure theory, Van Nostrand and Co.
2. Rao, M. M. (2012), Random and Vector Measures, Series on Multivariate Analysis, 9, World Scientific, ISBN 978-
981-4350-81-5, MR 2840012 (https://www.ams.org/mathscinet-getitem?mr=2840012).
Bibliography
Robert G. Bartle (1995) The Elements of Integration and Lebesgue Measure, Wiley Interscience.
Bauer, H. (2001), Measure and Integration Theory, Berlin: de Gruyter, ISBN 978-3110167191
Bear, H.S. (2001), A Primer of Lebesgue Integration, San Diego: Academic Press, ISBN 978-0120839711
Bogachev, V. I. (2006), Measure theory, Berlin: Springer, ISBN 978-3540345138
Bourbaki, Nicolas (2004), Integration I, Springer Verlag, ISBN 3-540-41129-1 Chapter III.
R. M. Dudley, 2002. Real Analysis and Probability. Cambridge University Press.
Folland, Gerald B. (1999), Real Analysis: Modern Techniques and Their Applications, John Wiley and Sons,
ISBN 0471317160 Second edition.
D. H. Fremlin, 2000. Measure Theory (http://www1.essex.ac.uk/maths/people/fremlin/mt.htm). Torres Fremlin.
Jech, Thomas (2003), Set Theory: The Third Millennium Edition, Revised and Expanded, Springer Verlag,
ISBN 3-540-44085-2
R. Duncan Luce and Louis Narens (1987). "measurement, theory of," The New Palgrave: A Dictionary of
Economics, v. 3, pp. 428–32.
M. E. Munroe, 1953. Introduction to Measure and Integration. Addison Wesley.
K. P. S. Bhaskara Rao and M. Bhaskara Rao (1983), Theory of Charges: A Study of Finitely Additive Measures,
London: Academic Press, pp. x + 315, ISBN 0-12-095780-9
Shilov, G. E., and Gurevich, B. L., 1978. Integral, Measure, and Derivative: A Unified Approach, Richard A.
Silverman, trans. Dover Publications. ISBN 0-486-63519-8. Emphasizes the Daniell integral.
Teschl, Gerald, Topics in Real and Functional Analysis (http://www.mat.univie.ac.at/~gerald/ftp/book-
fa/index.html), (lecture notes)
Tao, Terence (2011). An Introduction to Measure Theory. Providence, R.I.: American Mathematical Society.
ISBN 9780821869192.
Weaver, Nik (2013). Measure Theory and Functional Analysis. World Scientific. ISBN 9789814508568.
External links
Hazewinkel, Michiel, ed. (2001) [1994], "Measure" (https://www.encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=p/m0632
40), Encyclopedia of Mathematics, Springer Science+Business Media B.V. / Kluwer Academic Publishers,
ISBN 978-1-55608-010-4
Tutorial: Measure Theory for Dummies (https://vannevar.ece.uw.edu/techsite/papers/documents/UWEETR-2006-
0008.pdf)
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