Sol 5
Sol 5
Sol 5
(b) We have
E \ G ⊆ (E \ F ) ∪ (F \ G) and G \ E ⊆ (G \ F ) ∪ (F \ E).
It follows that
Consequently,
1
3. For a sequence (An )n=1,2,... of subsets of a set X, define
lim inf An := ∪∞ ∞
n=1 ∩k=n Ak and lim sup An := ∩∞ ∞
n=1 ∪k=n Ak .
n→∞ n→∞
Now let (X, S, µ) be a measure space with S being a σ-algebra and let (En )n=1,2,...
be a sequence of sets in S. Show the following:
(a) µ lim inf n→∞ En ≤ lim inf n→∞ µ(En ).
(b) µ lim supn→∞ En ≥ lim supn→∞ µ(En ), provided µ(∪∞
n=1 En ) < ∞.
But Fn ⊆ En for each n ∈ IN. Hence, µ(Fn ) ≤ µ(En ) for n ∈ IN. Consequently,
µ lim inf En = µ(F ) = lim µ(Fn ) ≤ lim inf µ(En ).
n→∞ n→∞ n→∞
µ lim sup En = µ(G) = lim µ(Gn ) ≥ lim inf µ(En ).
n→∞ n→∞ n→∞
Since the sets Ek (k ∈ IN) are µ∗ -measurable, it was proved in the class that
n
X
∗
(∪nk=1 Ek ) µ∗ (A ∩ Ek )
µ A∩ =
k=1
2
holds for every n ∈ IN. But ∪nk=1 Ek ⊆ ∪∞
k=1 Ek . Consequently,
n
X
µ∗ (A ∩ Ek ) ≤ µ∗ A ∩ (∪∞
k=1 Ek ) .
k=1
Letting n → ∞, we obtain
∞
X
µ∗ (A ∩ Ek ) ≤ µ∗ A ∩ (∪∞
k=1 Ek ) .
k=1
5. For n = 1, 2, . . ., let
2k − 1 1 2k − 1 1
Ink := − n, + n , k = 1, . . . , 2n−1 .
2n 4 2n 4
Let
n−1
∞ 2[
[
U := Ink and K := [0, 1] \ U.
n=1 k=1
n−1
2X 2 1
µ(En ) = µ(Ink ) = 2n−1 n
= n.
4 2
k=1
∞ ∞
X 5 X 1 5 1 7
λ(U ) ≤ λ(E1 ∪ E2 ) + λ(En ) = + n
= + = .
n=3
8 n=3 2 8 4 8