Lebesgue measure
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In mathematics, the Lebesgue measure, named after Henri Lebesgue, is the standard way of assigning a length, area or volume to subsets of Euclidean space. It is used throughout real analysis, in particular to define Lebesgue integration. Sets which can be assigned a volume are called Lebesgue measurable; the volume or measure of the Lebesgue measurable set A is denoted by λ(A). A Lebesgue measure of ∞ is possible, but even so, assuming the axiom of choice, not all subsets of Rn are Lebesgue measurable. The "strange" behavior of non-measurable sets gives rise to such statements as the Banach-Tarski paradox, a consequence of the axiom of choice.
Lebesgue measure is often denoted
, but this should not be confused with the distinct notion of a volume form.
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[edit] Examples
- If A is a closed interval [a, b], then its Lebesgue measure is the length b−a. The open interval (a, b) has the same measure, since the difference between the two sets has measure zero.
- If A is the Cartesian product of intervals [a, b] and [c, d], then it is a rectangle and its Lebesgue measure is the area (b−a)(d−c).
- The Cantor set is an example of an uncountable set that has Lebesgue measure zero.
[edit] Properties
The Lebesgue measure on Rn has the following properties:
- If A is a cartesian product of intervals I1 × I2 × ... × In, then A is Lebesgue measurable and
Here, |I| denotes the length of the interval I. - If A is a disjoint union of finitely many or countably many disjoint Lebesgue measurable sets, then A is itself Lebesgue measurable and λ(A) is equal to the sum (or infinite series) of the measures of the involved measurable sets.
- If A is Lebesgue measurable, then so is its complement.
- λ(A) ≥ 0 for every Lebesgue measurable set A.
- If A and B are Lebesgue measurable and A is a subset of B, then λ(A) ≤ λ(B). (A consequence of 2, 3 and 4.)
- Countable unions and intersections of Lebesgue measurable sets are Lebesgue measurable. (Not a consequence of 2 and 3, because a family of sets that is closed under complements and disjoint countable unions need not be closed under countable unions:
.) - If A is an open or closed subset of Rn (or even Borel set, see metric space), then A is Lebesgue measurable.
- If A is a Lebesgue measurable set, then it is "approximately open" and "approximately closed" in the sense of Lebesgue measure (see the regularity theorem for Lebesgue measure).
- Lebesgue measure is both locally finite and inner regular, and so it is a Radon measure.
- Lebesgue measure is strictly positive on non-empty open sets, and so its support is the whole of Rn.
- If A is a Lebesgue measurable set with λ(A) = 0 (a null set), then every subset of A is also a null set. A fortiori, every subset of A is measurable.
- If A is Lebesgue measurable and x is an element of Rn, then the translation of A by x, defined by A + x = {a + x : a ∈ A}, is also Lebesgue measurable and has the same measure as A.
- If A is Lebesgue measurable and δ > 0, then the dilation of A by δ defined by
is also Lebesgue measurable and has measure
. - More generally, if T is a linear transformation and A is a measurable subset of Rn, then T(A) is also Lebesgue measurable and has the measure
.
All the above may be succinctly summarized as follows:
- The Lebesgue measurable sets form a σ-algebra containing all products of intervals, and λ is the unique complete translation-invariant measure on that σ-algebra with
![\lambda([0,1]\times [0, 1]\times \cdots \times [0, 1])=1.](../../../../math/a/e/0/ae0aa7d82f1e579c35db26e8f5605367.png)
The Lebesgue measure also has the property of being σ-finite.
[edit] Null sets
A subset of Rn is a null set if, for every ε > 0, it can be covered with countably many products of n intervals whose total volume is at most ε. All countable sets are null sets.
If a subset of Rn has Hausdorff dimension less than n then it is a null set with respect to n-dimensional Lebesgue measure. Here Hausdorff dimension is relative to the Euclidean metric on Rn (or any metric Lipschitz equivalent to it). On the other hand a set may have topological dimension less than n and have positive n-dimensional Lebesgue measure. An example of this is the Smith-Volterra-Cantor set which has topological dimension 0 yet has positive 1-dimensional Lebesgue measure.
In order to show that a given set A is Lebesgue measurable, one usually tries to find a "nicer" set B which differs from A only by a null set (in the sense that the symmetric difference (A − B)
(B − A) is a null set) and then show that B can be generated using countable unions and intersections from open or closed sets.
[edit] Construction of the Lebesgue measure
The modern construction of the Lebesgue measure, based on outer measures, is due to Carathéodory. It proceeds as follows.
Fix
. A box in
is a set of the form
, where
. The volume
of this box is defined to be
.
For any subset A of Rn, we can define its outer measure λ * (A) by:
We then define the set A to be Lebesgue measurable if
for all sets
. These Lebesgue measurable sets form a σ-algebra, and the Lebesgue measure is defined by λ(A) = λ*(A) for any Lebesgue measurable set A.
According to the Vitali theorem there exists a subset of the real numbers R that is not Lebesgue measurable. Much more is true: if A is any subset of
of positive measure, then A has subsets which are not Lebesgue measurable.
[edit] Relation to other measures
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.
The Haar measure can be defined on any locally compact group and is a generalization of the Lebesgue measure (Rn with addition is a locally compact group).
The Hausdorff measure (see Hausdorff dimension) is a generalization of the Lebesgue measure that is useful for measuring the subsets of Rn of lower dimensions than n, like submanifolds, for example, surfaces or curves in R³ and fractal sets. The Hausdorff measure is not to be confused with the notion of Hausdorff dimension.
It can be shown that there is no infinite-dimensional analogue of Lebesgue measure.
[edit] History
Henri Lebesgue described his measure in 1901, followed the next year by his description of the Lebesgue integral. Both were published as part of his dissertation in 1902.



