3

Let $E=[0,1]$. Here are the definitions I am using:

Let $A\subset E$, then we define the outer measure of $A$ as $$\mu^*(A)=\inf \left\{\sum_k m(I_k): A\subset \cup_k I_k \right\}$$ where the infimum is taken over all any countable collection $\{I_k\}$ of intervals (open, closed or half open) whose union contains $A$, and we define the inner measure of $A$ as, $$\mu_*(A)=1-\mu^*(E\setminus A)$$ and finally $A$ is said to be measurable if $\mu^*(A)=\mu_*(A)$.

As a note, I have shown that $$\mu^*(A)=\inf\{\mu(G): A\subset G, G \text{ is open relative to } E\}$$ so that we may use this characterization of the outer measure of a set or the one originally given above. We can also reformulate the definition of a measurable set: a set $A\subset E$ is measurable if and only if $\mu^*(E)=\mu^*(E\cap A)+\mu^*(E\setminus A)$ and this follows immediately from the fact that if $A$ is measurable according to the definition above, then $\mu^*(A)+\mu^*(E\setminus A)=1$ and since $A\subset E$, we have $A\cap E=A$.

Now, I want to show yet another equivalent characterization of measurability in the following,

$\textbf{Problem:}$ I am trying to prove if $A \subset E$ is measurable then for any $F\subset E$, we have $$\mu^*(F)=\mu^*(F\cap A)+\mu^*(F\setminus A).$$

The hint in my book says to use $B\subset E$ is measurable if and only if for any $\epsilon >0$, $\exists G_1, G_2 \subset E$ and open relative to $E$ such that $B\subset G_1$, $E\setminus B\subset G_2$, and $\mu(G_1\cap G_2)<\epsilon$, so I also proved this (using the second characterization of $\mu^*$ provided here). For the current problem, this is my work so far:

Clearly, $$\mu^*(F)\leq \mu^*(F\cap A)+\mu^*(F\setminus A)$$ by sub-additivity. For the other inequality, let $\epsilon >0$, then by the above condition for measurability, we have (for some $G_1, G_2 \subset E$, etc), $$F\cap A\subset A \subset G_1 \text{ and } F\setminus A\subset E\setminus A\subset G_2$$ and $$\mu^*(F)+\mu^*(F\setminus A)\leq \mu(G_1)+\mu(G_2)=\mu(G_1 \cup G_2) + \mu(G_1\cap G_2)$$ but $G_1\cup G_2=E$, so the right hand side above is less than $1+\epsilon$. But I don't really see how this helps. We can conclude the left hand side is less than or equal to $1$ then since $\epsilon$ was arbitrary but I don't think I'm approaching this correctly. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated, thanks.

D.R.
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Nap D. Lover
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  • You are trying to prove what is usually the definition of measurability. So it seems you are using a different (probably equivalent) definition of of measurability. What is the definition you are using? – Ramiro Dec 07 '15 at 14:27
  • @Ramiro I am sorry, edited to reflect which definition of measure I was using. For convenience, my def is $A\subset E$ is measurable if it satisfies $\mu_(A)=\mu^(A)$ where the inner measure is $1-\mu^*(E\setminus A)$ – Nap D. Lover Dec 07 '15 at 14:48
  • You wrote: "We can also reformulate the definition of a measurable set: a set $A\subset E$ is measurable if and only if $\mu^(A)=\mu^(E\cap A)+\mu^(E\setminus A)$ and this follows... ". I think you meant $\mu^(E)=\mu^(E\cap A)+\mu^(E\setminus A)$. – Ramiro Dec 07 '15 at 21:18
  • @Ramiro yes, thanks for spotting the typo! – Nap D. Lover Dec 07 '15 at 21:26

1 Answers1

3

Let $E=[0,1]$.

You already know that that $A\subset E$ is measurable (that is: $\mu^*(A)=\mu_*(A)$) if and only if
$$ \mu^*(E)=\mu^*(E\cap A)+\mu^*(E\setminus A)$$

You also know that:

  1. if $A\subset E$ then $$\mu^*(A)=\inf\{\mu(G): A\subset G, G \text{ is open relative to } E\}$$

  2. $A\subset E$ is measurable if and only if for any $\epsilon >0$, $\exists G_1, G_2 \subset E$ and open relative to $E$ such that $A\subset G_1$, $E\setminus A\subset G_2$, and $\mu(G_1\cap G_2)<\epsilon$ (The hint from your book is to use this property).

  3. $\mu^*$ is subadditive.

In the proof below we will use properties 1, 2 and 3 and also the following four properties:

  1. $\mu^*$ is monotone (that means, if $A\subset B$ then $\mu^*(A)\leqslant \mu^*(B)$).

  2. if $G \subset E$ is open relative to $E$, then $\mu^*(G)=\mu(G)$.

  3. if $G,H \subset E$ is open relative to $E$, then $\mu^*(G\setminus H)=\mu(G\setminus H)$.

  4. $\mu$ is additive (in fact, it is $\sigma$-additive).

Proof: Let $A\subset E$ be measurable and let $F\subset E$. Let $\epsilon >0$.

Since $\mu^*(F)<\infty$, then, by property 1, there is $G_0$ open set relative to $E$, such that $F\subset G_0$ and $\mu^*(F)\leqslant\mu(G_0)<\mu^*(F)+\epsilon$.

Since $A$ is measurable, then, by property 2, $\exists G_1, G_2 \subset E$ and open relative to $E$ such that $A\subset G_1$, $E\setminus A\subset G_2$, and $\mu(G_1\cap G_2)<\epsilon$.

Let $D=E\setminus G_2$. Then $D\subset A$ and we have \begin{align} \mu^*(F\cap A)&+\mu^*(F\setminus A)\leqslant \mu^*(G_0\cap A)+\mu^*(G_0\setminus A) \leqslant & \textrm{ prop. 4} \\& \leqslant \mu^*(G_0\cap G_1)+\mu^*(G_0\setminus D) \leqslant & \textrm{ prop. 4} \\& \leqslant \mu^*(G_0\cap D)+\mu^*(G_0\cap (G_1\setminus D))+\mu^*(G_0\setminus D) = & \textrm{ prop. 3} \\& = \mu^*(G_0\setminus G_2)+\mu^*(G_0\cap (G_1\cap G_2))+\mu^*(G_0\cap G_2) = & \textrm{ definition of $D$} \\& = \mu(G_0\setminus G_2)+\mu(G_0\cap (G_1\cap G_2))+\mu(G_0\cap G_2) = & \textrm{ prop. 5 and 6} \\& = \mu(G_0)+\mu(G_0\cap (G_1\cap G_2)) \leqslant & \textrm{ prop. 7} \\& \leqslant \mu(G_0)+\mu(G_1\cap G_2) \leqslant & \textrm{ prop. 4} \\& \leqslant \mu^*(F)+\epsilon + \epsilon \end{align}

So, for any arbritary $\epsilon>0$, we have $\mu^*(F\cap A)+\mu^*(F\setminus A) \leqslant \mu^*(F)+2\epsilon$. So we have $$ \mu^*(F)\geqslant \mu^*(F\cap A)+\mu^*(F\setminus A)$$ Since $\mu^*$ is subadditive, we get $\mu^*(F)= \mu^*(F\cap A)+\mu^*(F\setminus A)$.

Ramiro
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    Thank you! Very clear answer, much appreciated. – Nap D. Lover Dec 08 '15 at 17:54
  • I am sorry, I actually don't understand the step which uses prop 3 ($\sigma$-sub additivity), i am trying to figure it out, there must be some set relation i'm missing, could you elaborate? – Nap D. Lover Dec 09 '15 at 01:25
  • Sure. Note that $$G_1=D+(G_1\setminus D)$$ (where "$+$" indicates disjoint union). So $$G_0\cap G_1=(G_0\cap D)+(G_0\cap (G_1\setminus D))$$ Then, since $\mu^$ is subadditive, we have
    $$\mu^
    (G_0\cap G_1) \leqslant \mu^(G_0\cap D)+\mu^(G_0\cap (G_1\setminus D))$$ Please, let me know if you have any further question.
    – Ramiro Dec 09 '15 at 01:53
  • ah okay. Thanks again. Yet another question: I had not proven subadditivity for the formal disjoint union operation $+$ (or seen it used in my texts on measure) is there any difference than proving it for regular unions? – Nap D. Lover Dec 12 '15 at 23:28
  • For the sake of outer measures, no. It is just an immediate consequence of subadditivity for "regular" unions. – Ramiro Dec 12 '15 at 23:38
  • ahh so is it merely identifying the canonical isomorphism of the two sets in a disjoint union with their original counterparts so the measure of the disjoint union is no more than the sum of measures of the original two sets? – Nap D. Lover Dec 12 '15 at 23:45
  • No. In Measure Theory, "disjoint union" is just the union of sets that are pairwise disjoint. When we write, for instance, $G_1=D+(G \setminus D)$, we mean $G_1=D\cup (G \setminus D)$ and $D\cap (G \setminus D)=\emptyset$. So, in Measure Theory, "disjoint union" is just a special case of union. That is why, for the sake of outer measures, subadditivity for disjoint unions is just an immediate consequence of subadditivity for unions. – Ramiro Dec 13 '15 at 02:03
  • Oh I am sorry for the misunderstanding, i am used to seeing $+$ mean the formal disjoint union or some call it the sum of sets. Thanks again! youve really helped. – Nap D. Lover Dec 13 '15 at 02:09