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Measures

σ-finite measure

a positive (or signed) measure μ defined on a σ-algebra Σ of subsets of a set X is called finite if μ(X) is a finite real number (rather than ∞). The measure μ is called σ-finite if X is the countable union of measurable sets with finite measure. A set in a measure space is said to have σ-finite measure] if it is a countable union of sets with finite measure.

Dirac measure

A Dirac measure is a measure δx on a set X (with any σ-algebra of subsets of X) defined for a given xX and any (measurable) set A ⊆ X by

where is the indicator function of . The Dirac measure is a probability measure

Counting measure

The counting measure on this measurable space is the positive measure defined by

for all , where denotes the cardinality of the set . The counting measure on is σ-finite if and only if the space is countable.

Complete measure

Complete measure (or, more precisely, a complete measure space) is a measure space in which every subset of every null set is measurable (having measure zero). More formally, (X, Σ, μ) is complete if and only if

Borel measure

Let X be a locally compact Hausdorff space, and let be the smallest σ-algebra that contains the open sets of X; this is known as the σ-algebra of Borel sets. A Borel measure is any measure μ defined on the σ-algebra of Borel sets. The real line with its usual topology is a locally compact Hausdorff space, hence we can define a Borel measure on it. In this case, is the smallest σ-algebra that contains the open intervals of . While there are many Borel measures μ, the choice of Borel measure which assigns for every interval is sometimes called "the" Borel measure on .

Lebesgue measure

Given a subset , with the length of an (open, closed, semi-open) interval given by , the Lebesgue outer measure is defined as

.

The Lebesgue measure of E is given by its Lebesgue outer measure if, for every ,

.

The Borel measure agrees with the Lebesgue measure on those sets for which it is defined; however, there are many more Lebesgue-measurable sets than there are Borel measurable sets. The Borel measure is translation-invariant, but not complete.

Topology

Urysohn's lemma

Urysohn's lemma states that a topological space is normal if and only if any two disjoint closed subsets can be separated by a function.

Measurable fnctions

Egorov's theorem

Let (fn) be a sequence of M-valued measurable functions, where M is a separable metric space, on some measure space (X,Σ,μ), and suppose there is a measurable subset A of finite μ-measure such that (fn) converges μ-almost everywhere on A to a limit function f. The following result holds: for every ε > 0, there exists a measurable subset B of A such that μ(B) < ε, and (fn) converges to f uniformly on the relative complement A \ B.