Tuesday, 9 October 2018

measure theory - If $mu(A)




Let (X,Σ,μ) be a finite measure space. Let F be a family of measurable functions f:XR. Prove that if lim




then \sup_{f\in\mathcal{F}}\int_X|f|d\mu<\infty,



and for all \epsilon >0 there exists \delta >0 such that: A\in\Sigma,\mu(A)<\delta\Longrightarrow \sup_{f\in\mathcal{F}}\int_A|f|d\mu<\epsilon.




For the first part.



Let t>0 such that: \displaystyle\sup_{f\in\mathcal{F}}\int_{\{x\in X:|f(x)|\ge t\}}|f|d\mu<1.



Fix f\in\mathcal{F}. Then $$\displaystyle\int_X|f|d\mu=\int_{\{|f|\ge t\}}|f|d\mu+\int_{\{|f|


And 1+t\mu(X) does not depend of f, so we get \sup_{f\in\mathcal{F}}\int_X|f|d\mu<\infty.



Is that correct?



I don't know how to do the second part. Could it be true that v(A):=\sup_{f\in\mathcal{F}}\int_A|f|d\mu is a finite measure? I wanted to try something similar to that known result when \mathcal{F} is just one function (some call it absolutely continuous of the measure v, I think).



Any hint? Thank you.


Answer



Your first part is correct.




For the second part, try to bound \int_A |f|\,d\mu similarly to how you bounded \int_X |f|\,d\mu in the first part:



$$\int_A |f|\,d\mu=\int_{A\cap \{|f|Then try to make the right side as small as possible, by choosing t and \delta appropriately.


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