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Lebesgue's decomposition theorem

In mathematics, more precisely in measure theory, Lebesgue's decomposition theorem[1][2][3] states that for every two σ-finite signed measures and on a measurable space there exist two σ-finite signed measures and such that:

These two measures are uniquely determined by and

Refinement

Lebesgue's decomposition theorem can be refined in a number of ways.

First, the decomposition of a regular Borel measure on the real line can be refined:[4]

where

Second, absolutely continuous measures are classified by the Radon–Nikodym theorem, and discrete measures are easily understood. Hence (singular continuous measures aside), Lebesgue decomposition gives a very explicit description of measures. The Cantor measure (the probability measure on the real line whose cumulative distribution function is the Cantor function) is an example of a singular continuous measure.

Related concepts

Lévy–Itō decomposition

The analogous[citation needed] decomposition for a stochastic processes is the Lévy–Itō decomposition: given a Lévy process X, it can be decomposed as a sum of three independent Lévy processes where:

See also

Citations

  1. ^ (Halmos 1974, Section 32, Theorem C)
  2. ^ (Hewitt & Stromberg 1965, Chapter V, § 19, (19.42) Lebesgue Decomposition Theorem)
  3. ^ (Rudin 1974, Section 6.9, The Theorem of Lebesgue-Radon-Nikodym)
  4. ^ (Hewitt & Stromberg 1965, Chapter V, § 19, (19.61) Theorem)

References

This article incorporates material from Lebesgue decomposition theorem on PlanetMath, which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.