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Fubini's theorem

In mathematical analysis Fubini's theorem is a result that gives conditions under which it is possible to compute a double integral by using an iterated integral, introduced by Guido Fubini in 1907. One may switch the order of integration if the double integral yields a finite answer when the integrand is replaced by its absolute value.

Fubini's theorem implies that two iterated integrals are equal to the corresponding double integral across its integrands. Tonelli's theorem, introduced by Leonida Tonelli in 1909, is similar, but applies to a non-negative measurable function rather than one integrable over their domains.

A related theorem is often called Fubini's theorem for infinite series,[1] which states that if is a doubly-indexed sequence of real numbers, and if is absolutely convergent, then

Although Fubini's theorem for infinite series is a special case of the more general Fubini's theorem, it is not appropriate to characterize it as a logical consequence of Fubini's theorem. This is because some properties of measures, in particular sub-additivity, are often proved using Fubini's theorem for infinite series.[2] In this case, Fubini's general theorem is a logical consequence of Fubini's theorem for infinite series.

History

The special case of Fubini's theorem for continuous functions on a product of closed bounded subsets of real vector spaces was known to Leonhard Euler in the 18th century. Henri Lebesgue (1904) extended this to bounded measurable functions on a product of intervals.[3] Levi (1906) conjectured that the theorem could be extended to functions that were integrable rather than bounded, and this was proved by Fubini (1907).[4] Leonida Tonelli (1909) gave a variation of Fubini's theorem that applies to non-negative functions rather than integrable functions.[5]

Product measures

If X and Y are measure spaces with measures, there are several natural ways to define a product measure on their product.

The product X × Y of measure spaces (in the sense of category theory) has as its measurable sets the σ-algebra generated by the products A × B of measurable subsets of X and Y.

A measure μ on X × Y is called a product measure if μ(A × B) = μ1(A)μ2(B) for measurable subsets A ⊂ X and B ⊂ Y and measures µ1 on X and µ2 on Y. In general there may be many different product measures on X × Y. Fubini's theorem and Tonelli's theorem both need technical conditions to avoid this complication; the most common way is to assume all measure spaces are σ-finite, in which case there is a unique product measure on X×Y. There is always a unique maximal product measure on X × Y, where the measure of a measurable set is the inf of the measures of sets containing it that are countable unions of products of measurable sets. The maximal product measure can be constructed by applying Carathéodory's extension theorem to the additive function μ such that μ(A × B) = μ1(A)μ2(B) on the ring of sets generated by products of measurable sets. (Carathéodory's extension theorem gives a measure on a measure space that in general contains more measurable sets than the measure space X × Y, so strictly speaking the measure should be restricted to the σ-algebra generated by the products A × B of measurable subsets of X and Y.)

The product of two complete measure spaces is not usually complete. For example, the product of the Lebesgue measure on the unit interval I with itself is not the Lebesgue measure on the square I × I. There is a variation of Fubini's theorem for complete measures, which uses the completion of the product of measures rather than the uncompleted product.

For integrable functions

Suppose X and Y are σ-finite measure spaces, and suppose that X × Y is given the product measure (which is unique as X and Y are σ-finite). Fubini's theorem states that if f is X × Y integrable, meaning that f is a measurable function and

 
then
 

The first two integrals are iterated integrals with respect to two measures, respectively, and the third is an integral with respect to the product measure. The partial integrals   and   need not be defined everywhere, but this does not matter as the points where they are not defined form a set of measure 0.

If the above integral of the absolute value is not finite, then the two iterated integrals may have different values. See below for an illustration of this possibility.

The condition that X and Y are σ-finite is usually harmless because in practice almost all measure spaces one wishes to use Fubini's theorem for are σ-finite. Fubini's theorem has some rather technical extensions to the case when X and Y are not assumed to be σ-finite (Fremlin 2003). The main extra complication in this case is that there may be more than one product measure on X×Y. Fubini's theorem continues to hold for the maximal product measure, but can fail for other product measures. For example, there is a product measure and a non-negative measurable function f for which the double integral of |f| is zero but the two iterated integrals have different values; see the section on counterexamples below for an example of this. Tonelli's theorem and the Fubini–Tonelli theorem (stated below) can fail on non σ-finite spaces even for the maximal product measure.

Tonelli's theorem for non-negative measurable functions

Tonelli's theorem (named after Leonida Tonelli) is a successor of Fubini's theorem. The conclusion of Tonelli's theorem is identical to that of Fubini's theorem, but the assumption that   has a finite integral is replaced by the assumption that   is a non-negative measurable function.

Tonelli's theorem states that if (X, A, μ) and (Y, B, ν) are σ-finite measure spaces, while f from X×Y to [0,∞] is non-negative measurable function, then

 

A special case of Tonelli's theorem is in the interchange of the summations, as in  , where   are non-negative for all x and y. The crux of the theorem is that the interchange of order of summation holds even if the series diverges. In effect, the only way a change in order of summation can change the sum is when there exist some subsequences that diverge to   and others diverging to  . With all elements non-negative, this does not happen in the stated example.

Without the condition that the measure spaces are σ-finite it is possible for all three of these integrals to have different values. Some authors give generalizations of Tonelli's theorem to some measure spaces that are not σ-finite but these generalizations often add conditions that immediately reduce the problem to the σ-finite case. For example, one could take the σ-algebra on A×B to be that generated by the product of subsets of finite measure, rather than that generated by all products of measurable subsets, though this has the undesirable consequence that the projections from the product to its factors A and B are not measurable. Another way is to add the condition that the support of f is contained in a countable union of products of sets of finite measure. Fremlin (2003) gives some rather technical extensions of Tonelli's theorem to some non σ-finite spaces. None of these generalizations have found any significant applications outside abstract measure theory, largely because almost all measure spaces of practical interest are σ-finite.

Fubini–Tonelli theorem

Combining Fubini's theorem with Tonelli's theorem gives the Fubini–Tonelli theorem (often just called Fubini's theorem), which states that if   and   are σ-finite measure spaces, and if   is a measurable function, then

 
Besides if any one of these integrals is finite, then
 

The absolute value of   in the conditions above can be replaced by either the positive or the negative part of  ; these forms include Tonelli's theorem as a special case as the negative part of a non-negative function is zero and so has finite integral. Informally all these conditions say that the double integral of   is well defined, though possibly infinite.

The advantage of the Fubini–Tonelli over Fubini's theorem is that the repeated integrals of   may be easier to study than the double integral. As in Fubini's theorem, the single integrals may fail to be defined on a measure 0 set.

For complete measures

The versions of Fubini's and Tonelli's theorems above do not apply to integration on the product of the real line   with itself with Lebesgue measure. The problem is that Lebesgue measure on   is not the product of Lebesgue measure on   with itself, but rather the completion of this: a product of two complete measure spaces   and   is not in general complete. For this reason one sometimes uses versions of Fubini's theorem for complete measures: roughly speaking one just replaces all measures by their completions. The various versions of Fubini's theorem are similar to the versions above, with the following minor differences:

  • Instead of taking a product   of two measure spaces, one takes the completion of some product.
  • If   is measurable on the completion of   then its restrictions to vertical or horizontal lines may be non-measurable for a measure zero subset of lines, so one has to allow for the possibility that the vertical or horizontal integrals are undefined on a set of measure 0 because they involve integrating non-measurable functions. This makes little difference, because they can already be undefined due to the functions not being integrable.
  • One generally also assumes that the measures on   and   are complete, otherwise the two partial integrals along vertical or horizontal lines may be well-defined but not measurable. For example, if   is the characteristic function of a product of a measurable set and a non-measurable set contained in a measure 0 set then its single integral is well defined everywhere but non-measurable.

Proofs

Proofs of the Fubini and Tonelli theorems are necessarily somewhat technical, as they have to use a hypothesis related to σ-finiteness. Most proofs involve building up to the full theorems by proving them for increasingly complicated functions with the steps as follows.

  1. Use the fact that the measure on the product is a product measure to prove the theorems for the characteristic functions of rectangles.
  2. Use the condition that the spaces are σ-finite (or some related condition) to prove the theorem for the characteristic functions of measurable sets. This also covers the case of simple measurable functions (measurable functions taking only a finite number of values).
  3. Use the condition that the functions are measurable to prove the theorems for positive measurable functions by approximating them by simple measurable functions. This proves Tonelli's theorem.
  4. Use the condition that the functions are integrable to write them as the difference of two positive integrable functions, and apply Tonelli's theorem to each of these. This proves Fubini's theorem.

Riemann integrals

For Riemann integrals, Fubini's theorem is proven by refining the partitions along the x-axis and y-axis as to create a joint partition of the form  , which is a partition over  . This is used to show that the double integrals of either order are equal to the integral over  .

Counterexamples

The following examples show how Fubini's theorem and Tonelli's theorem can fail if any of their hypotheses are omitted.

Failure of Tonelli's theorem for non σ-finite spaces

Suppose that X is the unit interval with the Lebesgue measurable sets and Lebesgue measure, and Y is the unit interval with all subsets measurable and the counting measure, so that Y is not σ-finite. If f is the characteristic function of the diagonal of X×Y, then integrating f along X gives the 0 function on Y, but integrating f along Y gives the function 1 on X. So the two iterated integrals are different. This shows that Tonelli's theorem can fail for spaces that are not σ-finite no matter what product measure is chosen. The measures are both decomposable, showing that Tonelli's theorem fails for decomposable measures (which are slightly more general than σ-finite measures).

Failure of Fubini's theorem for non-maximal product measures

Fubini's theorem holds for spaces even if they are not assumed to be σ-finite provided one uses the maximal product measure. In the example above, for the maximal product measure, the diagonal has infinite measure so the double integral of |f| is infinite, and Fubini's theorem holds vacuously. However, if we give X×Y the product measure such that the measure of a set is the sum of the Lebesgue measures of its horizontal sections, then the double integral of |f| is zero, but the two iterated integrals still have different values. This gives an example of a product measure where Fubini's theorem fails.

This gives an example of two different product measures on the same product of two measure spaces. For products of two σ-finite measure spaces, there is only one product measure.

Failure of Tonelli's theorem for non-measurable functions

Suppose that X is the first uncountable ordinal, with the finite measure where the measurable sets are either countable (with measure 0) or the sets of countable complement (with measure 1). The (non-measurable) subset E of X×X given by pairs (x,y) with x<y is countable on every horizontal line and has countable complement on every vertical line. If f is the characteristic function of E then the two iterated integrals of f are defined and have different values 1 and 0. The function f is not measurable. This shows that Tonelli's theorem can fail for non-measurable functions.

Failure of Fubini's theorem for non-measurable functions

A variation of the example above shows that Fubini's theorem can fail for non-measurable functions even if |f| is integrable and both repeated integrals are well defined: if we take f to be 1 on E and –1 on the complement of E, then |f| is integrable on the product with integral 1, and both repeated integrals are well defined, but have different values 1 and –1.

Assuming the continuum hypothesis, one can identify X with the unit interval I, so there is a bounded non-negative function on I×I whose two iterated integrals (using Lebesgue measure) are both defined but unequal. This example was found by Wacław Sierpiński (1920).[6] The stronger versions of Fubini's theorem on a product of two unit intervals with Lebesgue measure, where the function is no longer assumed to be measurable but merely that the two iterated integrals are well defined and exist, are independent of the standard Zermelo–Fraenkel axioms of set theory. The continuum hypothesis and Martin's axiom both imply that there exists a function on the unit square whose iterated integrals are not equal, while Harvey Friedman (1980) showed that it is consistent with ZFC that a strong Fubini-type theorem for [0, 1] does hold, and whenever the two iterated integrals exist they are equal.[7] See List of statements undecidable in ZFC.

Failure of Fubini's theorem for non-integrable functions

Fubini's theorem tells us that (for measurable functions on a product of σ-finite measure spaces) if the integral of the absolute value is finite, then the order of integration does not matter; if we integrate first with respect to x and then with respect to y, we get the same result as if we integrate first with respect to y and then with respect to x. The assumption that the integral of the absolute value is finite is "Lebesgue integrability", and without it the two repeated integrals can have different values.

A simple example to show that the repeated integrals can be different in general is to take the two measure spaces to be the positive integers, and to take the function f(x,y) to be 1 if x = y, −1 if x = y + 1, and 0 otherwise. Then the two repeated integrals have different values 0 and 1.

Another example is as follows for the function

 
The iterated integrals
 
and
 
have different values. The corresponding double integral does not converge absolutely (in other words the integral of the absolute value is not finite):
 

See also

References

  1. ^ Tao, Terence (2016), Analysis I, p. 188, ISBN 9789811017896
  2. ^ Royden, Halsey (2010), Real Analysis, p. 34, ISBN 9780131437470
  3. ^ Lebesgue, Henri (1904), Leçons sur l'intégration et la recherche des fonctions primitives, Paris: Gauthier-Villars
  4. ^ Fubini, Guido (1907), "Sugli integrali multipli", Rom. Acc. L. Rend. (5), 16 (1): 608–614, JFM 38.0343.02 Reprinted in Fubini, G. (1958), Opere scelte, vol. 2, Cremonese, pp. 243–249
  5. ^ Tonelli, Leonida (1909). "Sull'integrazione per parti". Atti della Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei. (5). 18 (2): 246–253.
  6. ^ Sierpiński, Wacław (1920), "Sur un problème concernant les ensembles mesurables superficiellement", Fundamenta Mathematicae, 1 (1): 112–115, doi:10.4064/fm-1-1-112-115
  7. ^ Friedman, Harvey (1980), "A Consistent Fubini-Tonelli Theorem for Nonmeasurable Functions", Illinois Journal of Mathematics, 24 (3): 390–395, doi:10.1215/ijm/1256047607, MR 0573474

Further reading

  • DiBenedetto, Emmanuele (2002), Real Analysis, Birkhäuser Advanced Texts: Basler Lehrbücher, Boston: Birkhäuser, doi:10.1007/978-1-4612-0117-5, ISBN 0-8176-4231-5, MR 1897317
  • Billingsley, Patrick (1995), "Product Measure and Fubini's Theorem", Probability and Measure, New York: Wiley, pp. 231–240, ISBN 0-471-00710-2
  • Weir, Alan J. (1973), "Fubini's Theorem", Lebesgue Integration and Measure, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 83–92, ISBN 0-521-08728-7

External links

fubini, theorem, fubini, theorem, category, kuratowski, ulam, theorem, this, article, technical, most, readers, understand, please, help, improve, make, understandable, experts, without, removing, technical, details, august, 2020, learn, when, remove, this, te. For the Fubini theorem for category see Kuratowski Ulam theorem This article may be too technical for most readers to understand Please help improve it to make it understandable to non experts without removing the technical details August 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message In mathematical analysis Fubini s theorem is a result that gives conditions under which it is possible to compute a double integral by using an iterated integral introduced by Guido Fubini in 1907 One may switch the order of integration if the double integral yields a finite answer when the integrand is replaced by its absolute value X Y f x y d x y X Y f x y d y d x Y X f x y d x d y if X Y f x y d x y lt displaystyle iint limits X times Y f x y text d x y int X left int Y f x y text d y right text d x int Y left int X f x y text d x right text d y qquad text if qquad iint limits X times Y f x y text d x y lt infty Fubini s theorem implies that two iterated integrals are equal to the corresponding double integral across its integrands Tonelli s theorem introduced by Leonida Tonelli in 1909 is similar but applies to a non negative measurable function rather than one integrable over their domains A related theorem is often called Fubini s theorem for infinite series 1 which states that if a m n m 1 n 1 textstyle a m n m 1 n 1 infty is a doubly indexed sequence of real numbers and if m n N N a m n textstyle sum m n in mathbb N times mathbb N a m n is absolutely convergent then m n N N a m n m 1 n 1 a m n n 1 m 1 a m n displaystyle sum m n in mathbb N times mathbb N a m n sum m 1 infty sum n 1 infty a m n sum n 1 infty sum m 1 infty a m n Although Fubini s theorem for infinite series is a special case of the more general Fubini s theorem it is not appropriate to characterize it as a logical consequence of Fubini s theorem This is because some properties of measures in particular sub additivity are often proved using Fubini s theorem for infinite series 2 In this case Fubini s general theorem is a logical consequence of Fubini s theorem for infinite series Contents 1 History 2 Product measures 3 For integrable functions 4 Tonelli s theorem for non negative measurable functions 5 Fubini Tonelli theorem 6 For complete measures 7 Proofs 7 1 Riemann integrals 8 Counterexamples 8 1 Failure of Tonelli s theorem for non s finite spaces 8 2 Failure of Fubini s theorem for non maximal product measures 8 3 Failure of Tonelli s theorem for non measurable functions 8 4 Failure of Fubini s theorem for non measurable functions 8 5 Failure of Fubini s theorem for non integrable functions 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistory EditThe special case of Fubini s theorem for continuous functions on a product of closed bounded subsets of real vector spaces was known to Leonhard Euler in the 18th century Henri Lebesgue 1904 extended this to bounded measurable functions on a product of intervals 3 Levi 1906 harvtxt error no target CITEREFLevi1906 help conjectured that the theorem could be extended to functions that were integrable rather than bounded and this was proved by Fubini 1907 4 Leonida Tonelli 1909 gave a variation of Fubini s theorem that applies to non negative functions rather than integrable functions 5 Product measures EditIf X and Y are measure spaces with measures there are several natural ways to define a product measure on their product The product X Y of measure spaces in the sense of category theory has as its measurable sets the s algebra generated by the products A B of measurable subsets of X and Y A measure m on X Y is called a product measure if m A B m1 A m2 B for measurable subsets A X and B Y and measures µ1 on X and µ2 on Y In general there may be many different product measures on X Y Fubini s theorem and Tonelli s theorem both need technical conditions to avoid this complication the most common way is to assume all measure spaces are s finite in which case there is a unique product measure on X Y There is always a unique maximal product measure on X Y where the measure of a measurable set is the inf of the measures of sets containing it that are countable unions of products of measurable sets The maximal product measure can be constructed by applying Caratheodory s extension theorem to the additive function m such that m A B m1 A m2 B on the ring of sets generated by products of measurable sets Caratheodory s extension theorem gives a measure on a measure space that in general contains more measurable sets than the measure space X Y so strictly speaking the measure should be restricted to the s algebra generated by the products A B of measurable subsets of X and Y The product of two complete measure spaces is not usually complete For example the product of the Lebesgue measure on the unit interval I with itself is not the Lebesgue measure on the square I I There is a variation of Fubini s theorem for complete measures which uses the completion of the product of measures rather than the uncompleted product For integrable functions EditSuppose X and Y are s finite measure spaces and suppose that X Y is given the product measure which is unique as X and Y are s finite Fubini s theorem states that if f is X Y integrable meaning that f is a measurable function and X Y f x y d x y lt displaystyle int X times Y f x y text d x y lt infty then X Y f x y d y d x Y X f x y d x d y X Y f x y d x y displaystyle int X left int Y f x y text d y right text d x int Y left int X f x y text d x right text d y int X times Y f x y text d x y The first two integrals are iterated integrals with respect to two measures respectively and the third is an integral with respect to the product measure The partial integrals Y f x y d y textstyle int Y f x y text d y and X f x y d x textstyle int X f x y text d x need not be defined everywhere but this does not matter as the points where they are not defined form a set of measure 0 If the above integral of the absolute value is not finite then the two iterated integrals may have different values See below for an illustration of this possibility The condition that X and Y are s finite is usually harmless because in practice almost all measure spaces one wishes to use Fubini s theorem for are s finite Fubini s theorem has some rather technical extensions to the case when X and Y are not assumed to be s finite Fremlin 2003 harv error no target CITEREFFremlin2003 help The main extra complication in this case is that there may be more than one product measure on X Y Fubini s theorem continues to hold for the maximal product measure but can fail for other product measures For example there is a product measure and a non negative measurable function f for which the double integral of f is zero but the two iterated integrals have different values see the section on counterexamples below for an example of this Tonelli s theorem and the Fubini Tonelli theorem stated below can fail on non s finite spaces even for the maximal product measure Tonelli s theorem for non negative measurable functions EditTonelli s theorem named after Leonida Tonelli is a successor of Fubini s theorem The conclusion of Tonelli s theorem is identical to that of Fubini s theorem but the assumption that f displaystyle f has a finite integral is replaced by the assumption that f displaystyle f is a non negative measurable function Tonelli s theorem states that if X A m and Y B n are s finite measure spaces while f from X Y to 0 is non negative measurable function then X Y f x y d y d x Y X f x y d x d y X Y f x y d x y displaystyle int X left int Y f x y text d y right text d x int Y left int X f x y text d x right text d y int X times Y f x y text d x y A special case of Tonelli s theorem is in the interchange of the summations as in x y a x y y x a x y textstyle sum x sum y a xy sum y sum x a xy where a x y displaystyle a xy are non negative for all x and y The crux of the theorem is that the interchange of order of summation holds even if the series diverges In effect the only way a change in order of summation can change the sum is when there exist some subsequences that diverge to displaystyle infty and others diverging to displaystyle infty With all elements non negative this does not happen in the stated example Without the condition that the measure spaces are s finite it is possible for all three of these integrals to have different values Some authors give generalizations of Tonelli s theorem to some measure spaces that are not s finite but these generalizations often add conditions that immediately reduce the problem to the s finite case For example one could take the s algebra on A B to be that generated by the product of subsets of finite measure rather than that generated by all products of measurable subsets though this has the undesirable consequence that the projections from the product to its factors A and B are not measurable Another way is to add the condition that the support of f is contained in a countable union of products of sets of finite measure Fremlin 2003 harvtxt error no target CITEREFFremlin2003 help gives some rather technical extensions of Tonelli s theorem to some non s finite spaces None of these generalizations have found any significant applications outside abstract measure theory largely because almost all measure spaces of practical interest are s finite Fubini Tonelli theorem EditCombining Fubini s theorem with Tonelli s theorem gives the Fubini Tonelli theorem often just called Fubini s theorem which states that if X displaystyle X and Y displaystyle Y are s finite measure spaces and if f displaystyle f is a measurable function then X Y f x y d y d x Y X f x y d x d y X Y f x y d x y displaystyle int X left int Y f x y text d y right text d x int Y left int X f x y text d x right text d y int X times Y f x y text d x y Besides if any one of these integrals is finite then X Y f x y d y d x Y X f x y d x d y X Y f x y d x y displaystyle int X left int Y f x y text d y right text d x int Y left int X f x y text d x right text d y int X times Y f x y text d x y The absolute value of f displaystyle f in the conditions above can be replaced by either the positive or the negative part of f displaystyle f these forms include Tonelli s theorem as a special case as the negative part of a non negative function is zero and so has finite integral Informally all these conditions say that the double integral of f displaystyle f is well defined though possibly infinite The advantage of the Fubini Tonelli over Fubini s theorem is that the repeated integrals of f displaystyle f may be easier to study than the double integral As in Fubini s theorem the single integrals may fail to be defined on a measure 0 set For complete measures EditThe versions of Fubini s and Tonelli s theorems above do not apply to integration on the product of the real line R displaystyle mathbb R with itself with Lebesgue measure The problem is that Lebesgue measure on R R displaystyle mathbb R times mathbb R is not the product of Lebesgue measure on R displaystyle mathbb R with itself but rather the completion of this a product of two complete measure spaces X displaystyle X and Y displaystyle Y is not in general complete For this reason one sometimes uses versions of Fubini s theorem for complete measures roughly speaking one just replaces all measures by their completions The various versions of Fubini s theorem are similar to the versions above with the following minor differences Instead of taking a product X Y displaystyle X times Y of two measure spaces one takes the completion of some product If f displaystyle f is measurable on the completion of X Y displaystyle X times Y then its restrictions to vertical or horizontal lines may be non measurable for a measure zero subset of lines so one has to allow for the possibility that the vertical or horizontal integrals are undefined on a set of measure 0 because they involve integrating non measurable functions This makes little difference because they can already be undefined due to the functions not being integrable One generally also assumes that the measures on X displaystyle X and Y displaystyle Y are complete otherwise the two partial integrals along vertical or horizontal lines may be well defined but not measurable For example if f displaystyle f is the characteristic function of a product of a measurable set and a non measurable set contained in a measure 0 set then its single integral is well defined everywhere but non measurable Proofs EditProofs of the Fubini and Tonelli theorems are necessarily somewhat technical as they have to use a hypothesis related to s finiteness Most proofs involve building up to the full theorems by proving them for increasingly complicated functions with the steps as follows Use the fact that the measure on the product is a product measure to prove the theorems for the characteristic functions of rectangles Use the condition that the spaces are s finite or some related condition to prove the theorem for the characteristic functions of measurable sets This also covers the case of simple measurable functions measurable functions taking only a finite number of values Use the condition that the functions are measurable to prove the theorems for positive measurable functions by approximating them by simple measurable functions This proves Tonelli s theorem Use the condition that the functions are integrable to write them as the difference of two positive integrable functions and apply Tonelli s theorem to each of these This proves Fubini s theorem Riemann integrals Edit For Riemann integrals Fubini s theorem is proven by refining the partitions along the x axis and y axis as to create a joint partition of the form x i x i 1 y j y j 1 displaystyle x i x i 1 times y j y j 1 which is a partition over X Y displaystyle X times Y This is used to show that the double integrals of either order are equal to the integral over X Y displaystyle X times Y Counterexamples EditThe following examples show how Fubini s theorem and Tonelli s theorem can fail if any of their hypotheses are omitted Failure of Tonelli s theorem for non s finite spaces Edit Suppose that X is the unit interval with the Lebesgue measurable sets and Lebesgue measure and Y is the unit interval with all subsets measurable and the counting measure so that Y is not s finite If f is the characteristic function of the diagonal of X Y then integrating f along X gives the 0 function on Y but integrating f along Y gives the function 1 on X So the two iterated integrals are different This shows that Tonelli s theorem can fail for spaces that are not s finite no matter what product measure is chosen The measures are both decomposable showing that Tonelli s theorem fails for decomposable measures which are slightly more general than s finite measures Failure of Fubini s theorem for non maximal product measures Edit Fubini s theorem holds for spaces even if they are not assumed to be s finite provided one uses the maximal product measure In the example above for the maximal product measure the diagonal has infinite measure so the double integral of f is infinite and Fubini s theorem holds vacuously However if we give X Y the product measure such that the measure of a set is the sum of the Lebesgue measures of its horizontal sections then the double integral of f is zero but the two iterated integrals still have different values This gives an example of a product measure where Fubini s theorem fails This gives an example of two different product measures on the same product of two measure spaces For products of two s finite measure spaces there is only one product measure Failure of Tonelli s theorem for non measurable functions Edit Suppose that X is the first uncountable ordinal with the finite measure where the measurable sets are either countable with measure 0 or the sets of countable complement with measure 1 The non measurable subset E of X X given by pairs x y with x lt y is countable on every horizontal line and has countable complement on every vertical line If f is the characteristic function of E then the two iterated integrals of f are defined and have different values 1 and 0 The function f is not measurable This shows that Tonelli s theorem can fail for non measurable functions Failure of Fubini s theorem for non measurable functions Edit A variation of the example above shows that Fubini s theorem can fail for non measurable functions even if f is integrable and both repeated integrals are well defined if we take f to be 1 on E and 1 on the complement of E then f is integrable on the product with integral 1 and both repeated integrals are well defined but have different values 1 and 1 Assuming the continuum hypothesis one can identify X with the unit interval I so there is a bounded non negative function on I I whose two iterated integrals using Lebesgue measure are both defined but unequal This example was found by Waclaw Sierpinski 1920 6 The stronger versions of Fubini s theorem on a product of two unit intervals with Lebesgue measure where the function is no longer assumed to be measurable but merely that the two iterated integrals are well defined and exist are independent of the standard Zermelo Fraenkel axioms of set theory The continuum hypothesis and Martin s axiom both imply that there exists a function on the unit square whose iterated integrals are not equal while Harvey Friedman 1980 showed that it is consistent with ZFC that a strong Fubini type theorem for 0 1 does hold and whenever the two iterated integrals exist they are equal 7 See List of statements undecidable in ZFC Failure of Fubini s theorem for non integrable functions Edit Fubini s theorem tells us that for measurable functions on a product of s finite measure spaces if the integral of the absolute value is finite then the order of integration does not matter if we integrate first with respect to x and then with respect to y we get the same result as if we integrate first with respect to y and then with respect to x The assumption that the integral of the absolute value is finite is Lebesgue integrability and without it the two repeated integrals can have different values A simple example to show that the repeated integrals can be different in general is to take the two measure spaces to be the positive integers and to take the function f x y to be 1 if x y 1 if x y 1 and 0 otherwise Then the two repeated integrals have different values 0 and 1 Another example is as follows for the functionx 2 y 2 x 2 y 2 2 2 x y arctan y x displaystyle frac x 2 y 2 x 2 y 2 2 frac partial 2 partial x partial y arctan y x The iterated integrals x 0 1 y 0 1 x 2 y 2 x 2 y 2 2 d y d x p 4 displaystyle int x 0 1 left int y 0 1 frac x 2 y 2 x 2 y 2 2 text d y right text d x frac pi 4 and y 0 1 x 0 1 x 2 y 2 x 2 y 2 2 d x d y p 4 displaystyle int y 0 1 left int x 0 1 frac x 2 y 2 x 2 y 2 2 text d x right text d y frac pi 4 have different values The corresponding double integral does not converge absolutely in other words the integral of the absolute value is not finite 0 1 0 1 x 2 y 2 x 2 y 2 2 d y d x displaystyle int 0 1 int 0 1 left frac x 2 y 2 left x 2 y 2 right 2 right text d y text d x infty See also EditCavalieri s principle Geometry concept an early particular case Coarea formula generalization to geometric measure theory Disintegration theorem theorem in measure theory a restricted converse to Fubini s theorem Fubini s theorem for distributions Kuratowski Ulam theorem analog of Fubini s theorem for arbitrary second countable Baire spaces Symmetry of second derivatives analogue for differentiationReferences Edit Tao Terence 2016 Analysis I p 188 ISBN 9789811017896 Royden Halsey 2010 Real Analysis p 34 ISBN 9780131437470 Lebesgue Henri 1904 Lecons sur l integration et la recherche des fonctions primitives Paris Gauthier Villars Fubini Guido 1907 Sugli integrali multipli Rom Acc L Rend 5 16 1 608 614 JFM 38 0343 02 Reprinted in Fubini G 1958 Opere scelte vol 2 Cremonese pp 243 249 Tonelli Leonida 1909 Sull integrazione per parti Atti della Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei 5 18 2 246 253 Sierpinski Waclaw 1920 Sur un probleme concernant les ensembles mesurables superficiellement Fundamenta Mathematicae 1 1 112 115 doi 10 4064 fm 1 1 112 115 Friedman Harvey 1980 A Consistent Fubini Tonelli Theorem for Nonmeasurable Functions Illinois Journal of Mathematics 24 3 390 395 doi 10 1215 ijm 1256047607 MR 0573474Further reading EditDiBenedetto Emmanuele 2002 Real Analysis Birkhauser Advanced Texts Basler Lehrbucher Boston Birkhauser doi 10 1007 978 1 4612 0117 5 ISBN 0 8176 4231 5 MR 1897317 Billingsley Patrick 1995 Product Measure and Fubini s Theorem Probability and Measure New York Wiley pp 231 240 ISBN 0 471 00710 2 Weir Alan J 1973 Fubini s Theorem Lebesgue Integration and Measure Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 83 92 ISBN 0 521 08728 7External links EditKudryavtsev L D 2001 1994 Fubini theorem Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press Teschl Gerald Topics in Real and Functional Analysis lecture notes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fubini 27s theorem amp oldid 1128869629, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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