Scheffé's lemma

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Template:Short description In mathematics, Scheffé's lemma is a proposition in measure theory concerning the convergence of sequences of integrable functions. It states that, if fn is a sequence of integrable functions on a measure space (X,Σ,μ) that converges almost everywhere to another integrable function f, then |fnf|dμ0 if and only if |fn|dμ|f|dμ.[1]

The proof is based fundamentally on an application of the triangle inequality and Fatou's lemma.[2]

Applications

Applied to probability theory, Scheffe's theorem, in the form stated here, implies that almost everywhere pointwise convergence of the probability density functions of a sequence of μ-absolutely continuous random variables implies convergence in distribution of those random variables.

History

Henry Scheffé published a proof of the statement on convergence of probability densities in 1947.[3] The result is a special case of a theorem by Frigyes Riesz about convergence in Lp spaces published in 1928.[4]

References

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