Lusin's theorem

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In the mathematical field of real analysis, Lusin's theorem (or Luzin's theorem, named for Nikolai Luzin) states that every measurable function is a continuous function on nearly all its domain. In the informal formulation of J. E. Littlewood, "every measurable function is nearly continuous".

Classical statement

For an interval [ab], let

f:[a,b]\rightarrow \mathbb{C}

be a measurable function. Then, for every ε > 0, there exists a compact E ⊂ [ab] such that f restricted to E is continuous and

\mu ( E ) > b - a - \varepsilon.\,

Note that E inherits the subspace topology from [ab]; continuity of f restricted to E is defined using this topology.

General form

Let (X,\Sigma,\mu) be a Radon measure space and Y be a second-countable topological space, let

f: X \rightarrow Y

be a measurable function. Given ε > 0, for every A\in\Sigma of finite measure there is a closed set E with µ(A \ E) < ε such that f restricted to E is continuous. If A is locally compact, we can choose E to be compact and even find a continuous function f_\varepsilon: X \rightarrow Y with compact support that coincides with f on E and such that \ \sup_{x\in X} | f_\varepsilon (x) | \leq \sup_{x\in X} | f(x) |  .

Informally, measurable functions into spaces with countable base can be approximated by continuous functions on arbitrarily large portion of their domain.

References

  • N. Lusin. Sur les propriétés des fonctions mesurables, Comptes Rendus Acad. Sci. Paris 154 (1912), 1688–1690.
  • G. Folland. Real Analysis: Modern Techniques and Their Applications, 2nd ed. Chapter 2
  • W. Zygmunt. Scorza-Dragoni property (in Polish), UMCS, Lublin, 1990