This book presents a unified treatise of the theory of measure and integration. In the setting of a general measure space, every concept is defined precisely and every theorem is presented with a clear and complete proof with all the relevant details. Counter-examples are provided to show that certa
Integration and Modern Analysis Volume 244 || Lebesgue Measure and General Measure Theory
✍ Scribed by Benedetto, John J.; Czaja, Wojciech
- Book ID
- 115455242
- Publisher
- Birkhäuser Boston
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 951 KB
- Edition
- 2009
- Category
- Article
- ISBN
- 0817646566
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
This textbook and treatise begins with classical real variables, develops the Lebesgue theory abstractly and for Euclidean space, and analyzes the structure of measures. The authors' vision of modern real analysis is seen in their fascinating historical commentary and perspectives with other fields. There are comprehensive treatments of the role of absolute continuity, the evolution of the Riesz representation theorem to Radon measures and distribution theory, weak convergence of measures and the Dieudonné–Grothendieck theorem, modern differentiation theory, fractals and self-similarity, rearrangements and maximal functions, and surface and Hausdorff measures. There are hundreds of illuminating exercises, and extensive, focused appendices on functional and Fourier analysis. The presentation is ideal for the classroom, self-study, or professional reference.
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This book presents a unified treatise of the theory of measure and integration. In the setting of a general measure space, every concept is defined precisely and every theorem is presented with a clear and complete proof with all the relevant details. Counter-examples are provided to show that certa
This article develops the basics of the Lebesgue integral and measure theory. In terms of content, it adds nothing new to any of the existing textbooks on the subject. But our approach here will be to avoid unduly abstractness and absolute generality, instead focusing on producing proofs of useful r