Egorov's theorem

In measure theory, an area of mathematics, Egorov's theorem establishes a condition for the uniform convergence of a pointwise convergent sequence of measurable functions. It is also named Severini–Egoroff theorem or Severini–Egorov theorem, after Carlo Severini, an Italian mathematician, and Dmitri Egorov, a Russian physicist and geometer, who published independent proofs respectively in 1910 and 1911.

Egorov's theorem can be used along with compactly supported continuous functions to prove Lusin's theorem for integrable functions.

Historical note

The first proof of the theorem was given by Carlo Severini in 1910:[1][2] he used the result as a tool in his research on series of orthogonal functions. His work remained apparently unnoticed outside Italy, probably due to the fact that it is written in Italian, appeared in a scientific journal with limited diffusion and was considered only as a means to obtain other theorems. A year later Dmitri Egorov published his independently proved results,[3] and the theorem became widely known under his name: however, it is not uncommon to find references to this theorem as the Severini–Egoroff theorem or Severini–Egorov Theorem. The first mathematicians to prove independently the theorem in the nowadays common abstract measure space setting were Frigyes Riesz (1922, 1928), and in Wacław Sierpiński (1928):[4] an earlier generalization is due to Nikolai Luzin, who succeeded in slightly relaxing the requirement of finiteness of measure of the domain of convergence of the pointwise converging functions in the ample paper (Luzin 1916).[5] Further generalizations were given much later by Pavel Korovkin, in the paper (Korovkin 1947), and by Gabriel Mokobodzki in the paper (Mokobodzki 1970)

The formal statement of the theorem and its proof

Statement of the theorem

Let (fn) be a sequence of M-valued measurable functions, where M is a separable metric space, on some measure space (X,Σ,μ), and suppose there is a measurable subset A of finite μ-measure such that (fn) converges μ-almost everywhere on A to a limit function f. The following result holds: for every ε > 0, there exists a measurable subset B of A such that μ(B) < ε, and (fn) converges to f uniformly on the relative complement A \ B.

Here, μ(B) denotes the μ-measure of B. In words, the theorem says that pointwise convergence almost everywhere on A implies the apparently much stronger uniform convergence everywhere except on some subset B of arbitrarily small measure. This type of convergence is also called almost uniform convergence.

Discussion of assumptions and a counterexample

f_n(x) = 1_{[n,n+1]}(x),\qquad n\in\mathbb{N},\ x\in\mathbb{R},
defined on the real line. This sequence converges pointwise to the zero function everywhere but does not converge uniformly on ℝ \ B for any set B of finite measure: a counterexample in the general n-dimensional real vector spacen can be constructed as shown by Cafiero (1959, p. 302).

Proof

For natural numbers n and k, define the set En,k by the union

 E_{n,k} = \bigcup_{m\ge n} \left\{ x\in A \,\Big|\, |f_m(x) - f(x)| \ge \frac1k \right\}.

These sets get smaller as n increases, meaning that En+1,k is always a subset of En,k, because the first union involves fewer sets. A point x, for which the sequence (fm(x)) converges to f(x), cannot be in every En,k for a fixed k, because fm(x) has to stay closer to f(x) than 1/k eventually. Hence by the assumption of μ-almost everywhere pointwise convergence on A,

\mu\biggl(\bigcap_{n\in\mathbb{N}}E_{n,k}\biggr)=0

for every k. Since A is of finite measure, we have continuity from above; hence there exists, for each k, some natural number nk such that

\mu(E_{n_k,k}) < \frac\varepsilon{2^k}.

For x in this set we consider the speed of approach into the 1/k-neighbourhood of f(x) as too slow. Define

 B = \bigcup_{k\in\mathbb{N}} E_{n_k,k}

as the set of all those points x in A, for which the speed of approach into at least one of these 1/k-neighbourhoods of f(x) is too slow. On the set difference A \ B we therefore have uniform convergence.

Appealing to the sigma additivity of μ and using the geometric series, we get

\mu(B)
\le\sum_{k\in\mathbb{N}}\mu(E_{n_k,k})
<  \sum_{k\in\mathbb{N}}\frac\varepsilon{2^k}
=\varepsilon.

Generalizations

Luzin's version

Nikolai Luzin's generalization of the Severini–Egorov theorem is presented here according to Saks (1937, p. 19).

Statement

Under the same hypothesis of the abstract Severini–Egorov theorem suppose that A is the union of a sequence of measurable sets of finite μ-measure, and (fn) is a given sequence of M-valued measurable functions on some measure space (X,Σ,μ), such that (fn) converges μ-almost everywhere on A to a limit function f, then A can be expressed as the union of a sequence of measurable sets H, A1, A2,... such that μ(H) = 0 and (fn) converges to f uniformly on each set Ak.

Proof

It is sufficient to consider the case in which the set A is itself of finite μ-measure: using this hypothesis and the standard Severini–Egorov theorem, it is possible to define by mathematical induction a sequence of sets {Ak}k=1,2,... such that

\mu\left(A\setminus\bigcup_{k=1}^{N} A_k\right)\leq\frac{1}{N}

and such that (fn) converges to f uniformly on each set Ak for each k. Choosing

H=A\setminus\bigcup_{k=1}^{\infty} A_k

then obviously μ(H) = 0 and the theorem is proved.

Korovkin's version

The proof of the Korovkin version follows closely the version on Kharazishvili (2000, pp. 183–184), which however generalizes it to some extent by considering admissible functionals instead of non-negative measures and inequalities \scriptstyle\leq and \scriptstyle\geq respectively in conditions 1 and 2.

Statement

Let (M,d) denote a separable metric space and (X,Σ) a measurable space: consider a measurable set A and a class \scriptstyle\mathfrak{A} containing A and its measurable subsets such that their countable in unions and intersections belong to the same class. Suppose there exists a non-negative measure μ such that μ(A) exists and

  1. μ(\scriptstyle\capAn)=\scriptstyle\limμ(An) if A1\scriptstyle\supsetA2\scriptstyle\supset... with An\scriptstyle\in\mathfrak{A} for all n
  2. μ(\scriptstyle\cupAn)=\scriptstyle\limμ(An) if A1\scriptstyle\subsetA2\scriptstyle\subset... with \scriptstyle\cupAn\scriptstyle\in\mathfrak{A}.

If (fn) is a sequence of M-valued measurable functions converging μ-almost everywhere on A\scriptstyle\in\mathfrak{A} to a limit function f, then there exists a subset A′ of A such that 0 < μ(A)  μ(A′)<ε and where the convergence is also uniform.

Proof

Consider the indexed family of sets whose index set is the set of natural numbers m\scriptstyle\in\mathbb{N}, defined as follows:

A_{0,m}=\left\{x\in A|d(f_n(x),f(x)) \le 1\ \forall n\geq m\right\}

Obiviously

A_{0,1}\subseteq A_{0,2}\subseteq A_{0,3}\subseteq\dots

and

A=\bigcup_{m\in\mathbb{N}}A_{0,m}

therefore there is a natural number m0 such that putting A0,m0=A0 the following relation holds true:

0\leq\mu(A)-\mu(A_0)\leq\varepsilon

Using A0 it is possible to define the following indexed family

A_{1,m}=\left\{x\in A_0\left| d(f_m(x),f(x)) \le \frac12 \ \forall n\geq m\right.\right\}

satisfying the following two relationships, analogous to the previously found ones, i.e.

A_{1,1}\subseteq A_{1,2}\subseteq A_{1,3}\subseteq\dots

and

A_0=\bigcup_{m\in\mathbb{N}}A_{1,m}

This fact enable us to define the set A1,m1=A1, where m1 is a surely existing natural number such that

0\leq\mu(A)-\mu(A_1)\leq\varepsilon

By iterating the shown construction, another indexed family of set {An} is defined such that it has the following properties:

and finally putting

A^\prime=\bigcup_{n\in\mathbb{N}}A_n

the thesis is easily proved.

Notes

  1. Published in (Severini 1910).
  2. According to Straneo (1952, p. 101), Severini, while acknowledging his own priority in the publication of the result, was unwilling to disclose it publicly: it was Leonida Tonelli who, in the note (Tonelli 1924), credited him the priority for the first time.
  3. In the note (Egoroff 1911)
  4. According to Cafiero (1959, p. 315) and Saks (1937, p. 17).
  5. According to Saks (1937, p. 19).

References

Historical references

Scientific references

External links

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