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The Lebesgue measure has the following properties:
All the above may be succinctly summarized as follows:
A subset of Rn is a null set if, for every ε > 0, it can be covered with countably many products of n intervals whose total volume is at most ε. All countable sets are null sets, and so are sets in Rn whose dimension is smaller than n, for instance straight lines or circles in R2.
In order to show that a given set A is Lebesgue measurable, one usually tries to find a "nicer" set B which differs from A only by a null set (in the sense that the symmetric difference (A - B) u (B - A) is a null set) and then shows that B can be generated using countable unions and intersections from open or closed sets.
The modern construction of the Lebesgue measure, due to Carathéodory[?], proceeds as follows. For any subset B of Rn, we can define λ*(B) = inf { vol(M} : M is a countable union of products of intervals, and M contains B }. Here, vol(M) is sum of the product of the lengths of the involved intervals. We then define the set A to be Lebesgue measurable if
The Borel measure agrees with the Lebesgue measure on those sets for which it is defined; however, there are many more Lebesgue-measurable sets than there are Borel measurable sets. The Borel measure is translation-invariant, but not complete.
The Haar measure can be defined on any locally compact group[?] and is a generalization of the Lebesgue measure (Rn with addition is a locally compact group).
Henri Lebesgue described his measure in 1901, followed the next year by his description of the Lebesgue integral. Both were published as part of his dissertation in 1902.
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