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Here are my rough thoughts on an entry for the Lebesgue measure as per Eric’s suggestion of putting them here:
The Lebesgue measure’s origins can be traced to the broader theory of Lebesgue integration. The original purpose of the latter, in broad terms, was to expand the class of integrable functions in order to give meaning to functions that are not Riemann integrable. In order to accomplish this, the basic properties of the concept of the length of an interval must be understood. This then leads to the need to fully define the concept of measure, particularly in relation to sets. We begin with a lemma and a corollary.
Lemma: _Let I be an interval, where are disjoint intervals. Then (interpreted to mean that if one side , then so is the other, where can be , either because one of the summands is or because the series diverges).
Corollary: If I is any interval, then
where is any countable covering of I by intervals. .
Now suppose B is an arbitrary set. In order for B to be measurable, we must have where is any countable covering of B by intervals. We must also have where the infinum is taken over all countable coverings of B by intervals.
Definition: We may define the Lebesgue measure as being
Note that once the Lebesgue measure for is known for open sets, the outer regularity property allows us to find it for all Borel sets.
Huh? That seems pretty polished to me :)
See Lebesgue measure
Is there a reference?
It would be cool to address this from the nPOV in conjunction with Carathéodory’s extension theorem. I can smell some universal property somewhere in there.
Personally I like the presentation in Strichartz’s The Way of Analysis. I think it’s a very intuitive and readable presentation.
Edit: I added this to the reference list even though there isn’t an online version. It’s just such a great discussion I think everyone should read it.
More generally it is invariant with respect to linear transformations of determinant . Intuitively, the image of a parallelpiped can be chopped up into finitely many measurable pieces (polyhedra, in fact) and then rearranged in tangram fashion into another copy of . To see this, it is enough to consider the special case of an elementary row operation (that adds times the row to the row), since any of determinant is a composite of such. There it is not hard to specify a single chop-and-rearrange (consider the -dimensional case to get the general idea).
Okay, good. (BTW, I did get your email; I just haven’t quite figured out what I want to say in response.) I forgot to mention in my comment above that each “rearrangement” (after a “chop”) is actually a translation, which reduces the argument to the translation-invariance of Lebesgue measure.
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