Projection (measure theory)

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Template:Use dmy dates In measure theory, projection maps often appear when working with product (Cartesian) spaces: The product sigma-algebra of measurable spaces is defined to be the finest such that the projection mappings will be measurable. Sometimes for some reasons product spaces are equipped with Template:Sigma-algebra different than the product Template:Sigma-algebra. In these cases the projections need not be measurable at all.

The projected set of a measurable set is called analytic set and need not be a measurable set. However, in some cases, either relatively to the product Template:Sigma-algebra or relatively to some other Template:Sigma-algebra, projected set of measurable set is indeed measurable.

Henri Lebesgue himself, one of the founders of measure theory, was mistaken about that fact. In a paper from 1905 he wrote that the projection of Borel set in the plane onto the real line is again a Borel set.[1] The mathematician Mikhail Yakovlevich Suslin found that error about ten years later, and his following research has led to descriptive set theory.[2] The fundamental mistake of Lebesgue was to think that projection commutes with decreasing intersection, while there are simple counterexamples to that.[3]

Basic examples

For an example of a non-measurable set with measurable projections, consider the space X:={0,1} with the Template:Sigma-algebra :={,{0},{1},{0,1}} and the space Y:={0,1} with the Template:Sigma-algebra 𝒢:={,{0,1}}. The diagonal set {(0,0),(1,1)}X×Y is not measurable relatively to 𝒢, although the both projections are measurable sets.

The common example for a non-measurable set which is a projection of a measurable set, is in [[Lebesgue sigma-algebra|Lebesgue Template:Sigma-algebra]]. Let be Lebesgue Template:Sigma-algebra of and let be the Lebesgue Template:Sigma-algebra of 2. For any bounded N not in . the set N×{0} is in , since Lebesgue measure is complete and the product set is contained in a set of measure zero.

Still one can see that is not the product Template:Sigma-algebra but its completion. As for such example in product Template:Sigma-algebra, one can take the space {0,1} (or any product along a set with cardinality greater than continuum) with the product Template:Sigma-algebra =tt where t={,{0},{1},{0,1}} for every t. In fact, in this case "most" of the projected sets are not measurable, since the cardinality of is 020=20, whereas the cardinality of the projected sets is 220. There are also examples of Borel sets in the plane which their projection to the real line is not a Borel set, as Suslin showed.[2]

Measurable projection theorem

The following theorem gives a sufficient condition for the projection of measurable sets to be measurable.

Let (X,) be a measurable space and let (Y,) be a polish space where is its Borel Template:Sigma-algebra. Then for every set in the product Template:Sigma-algebra , the projected set onto X is a universally measurable set relatively to .[4]

An important special case of this theorem is that the projection of any Borel set of n onto nk where k<n is Lebesgue-measurable, even though it is not necessarily a Borel set. In addition, it means that the former example of non-Lebesgue-measurable set of which is a projection of some measurable set of 2, is the only sort of such example.

See also

References

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Template:Measure theory

  1. Lebesgue, H. (1905) Sur les fonctions représentables analytiquement. Journal de Mathématiques Pures et Appliquées. Vol. 1, 139–216.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Template:Cite book
  3. Template:Cite web
  4. * Template:Cite book