Perfect measure

In mathematics — specifically, in measure theory — a perfect measure (or, more accurately, a perfect measure space) is one that is "well-behaved" in some sense. Intuitively, a perfect measure μ is one for which, if we consider the pushforward measure on the real line R, then every measurable set is "μ-approximately a Borel set". The notion of perfectness is closely related to tightness of measures: indeed, in metric spaces, tight measures are always perfect.

Definition

A measure space (X, Σ, μ) is said to be perfect if, for every Σ-measurable function f : X → R and every A ⊆ R with f−1(A) ∈ Σ, there exist Borel subsets A1 and A2 of R such that

A 1 A A 2  and  μ ( f 1 ( A 2 A 1 ) ) = 0. {\displaystyle A_{1}\subseteq A\subseteq A_{2}{\mbox{ and }}\mu {\big (}f^{-1}(A_{2}\setminus A_{1}){\big )}=0.}

Results concerning perfect measures

  • If X is any metric space and μ is an inner regular (or tight) measure on X, then (XBXμ) is a perfect measure space, where BX denotes the Borel σ-algebra on X.

References

  • Parthasarathy, K. R. (2005). "Chapter 2, Section 4". Probability measures on metric spaces. AMS Chelsea Publishing, Providence, RI. ISBN 0-8218-3889-X. MR 2169627.
  • Rodine, R. H. (1966). "Perfect probability measures and regular conditional probabilities". Ann. Math. Statist. 37: 1273–1278.
  • Sazonov, V.V. (2001) [1994], "Perfect measure", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press
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