Difference between revisions of "Integral of a positive function (measure theory)"

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(Created page with "==Definition== {{:Integral of a positive function (measure theory)/Definition}} There are alternate notations, that make the ''variable of integration'' more clear, they are:...")
 
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{{Provisional page|grade=A*|msg=There are some problems here:
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* We don't really mean positive function, we mean non-negative. [[User:Alec|Alec]] ([[User talk:Alec|talk]]) 19:18, 14 April 2017 (UTC)
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This is under review as a part of measure theory}}
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==Definition==
 
==Definition==
 
{{:Integral of a positive function (measure theory)/Definition}}
 
{{:Integral of a positive function (measure theory)/Definition}}

Latest revision as of 19:18, 14 April 2017

Provisional page grade: A*
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There are some problems here:
  • We don't really mean positive function, we mean non-negative. Alec (talk) 19:18, 14 April 2017 (UTC)
This is under review as a part of measure theory

Definition

Let (X,A,μ) be a measure space, the \mu-integral of a positive numerical function, f\in\mathcal{M}^+_{\bar{\mathbb{R} } }(\mathcal{A}) [Note 1][Note 2] is[1]:

  • \int f\mathrm{d}\mu:=\text{Sup}\left\{I_\mu(g)\ \Big\vert\ g\le f, g\in\mathcal{E}^+(\mathcal{A})\right\}[Note 3]

Recall that:

There are alternate notations, that make the variable of integration more clear, they are:

  • \int f(x)\mu(\mathrm{d}x)[1]
  • \int f(x)\mathrm{d}\mu(x)[1]

Immediate results

[Expand]

  • \forall f\in\mathcal{E}^+(\mathcal{A})\left[\int f\mathrm{d}\mu=I_\mu(f)\right] - Integrating a simple function works

Notes

  1. Jump up So f:X\rightarrow\bar{\mathbb{R} }^+
  2. Jump up Notice that f is \mathcal{A}/\bar{\mathcal{B} } -measurable by definition, as \mathcal{M}_\mathcal{Z}(\mathcal{A}) denotes all the measurable functions that are \mathcal{A}/\mathcal{Z} -measurable, we just use the + as a slight abuse of notation to denote all the positive ones (with respect to the standard order on \bar{\mathbb{R} } - the extended reals)
  3. Jump up The g\le f is an abuse of notation for saying that g is everywhere less than f, we could have written:
    • \int f\mathrm{d}\mu=\text{Sup}\left\{I_\mu(g)\ \Big\vert\ g\le f, g\in\mathcal{E}^+\right\}=\text{Sup}\left\{I_\mu(g)\ \Big\vert\ g\in\left\{h\in\mathcal{E}^+(\mathcal{A})\ \big\vert\ \forall x\in X\left(h(x)\le f(x)\right)\right\}\right\} instead.
    Inline with: Notation for dealing with (extended) real-valued measurable maps

References

  1. Jump up to: 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Measures, Integrals and Martingales - René L. Schilling