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Essentials of Measure Theory electronic resource by Carlos S. Kubrusly.

By: Kubrusly, Carlos S [author.]Contributor(s): SpringerLink (Online service)Material type: TextTextPublication details: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2015Edition: 1st ed. 2015Description: XIII, 279 p. 1 illus. online resourceContent type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783319225067Subject(s): mathematics | Measure theory | Topology | Mathematics | Measure and Integration | TopologyDDC classification: 515.42 LOC classification: QA312-312.5Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Preface -- Part I. Introduction to Measure and Integration.-1. Measurable Functions -- 2. Measure on a σ-Algebra -- 3. Integral of Nonnegative Functions -- 4. Integral of Real-Valued Functions -- 5. Banach Spaces Lp -- 6. Convergence of Functions -- 7. Decomposition of Measures -- 8. Extension of Measures -- 9. Product Measures -- Part II -- 10. Remarks on Integrals -- 11. Borel Measure -- 12. Representation Theorems -- 13. Invariant Measures -- References -- Index.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: Classical in its approach, this textbook is thoughtfully designed and composed in two parts. Part I is meant for a one-semester beginning graduate course in measure theory, proposing an “abstract” approach to measure and integration, where the classical concrete cases of Lebesgue measure and Lebesgue integral are presented as an important particular case of general theory. Part II of the text is more advanced and is addressed to a more experienced reader. The material is designed to cover another one-semester graduate course subsequent to a first course, dealing with measure and integration in topological spaces. The final section of each chapter in Part I presents problems that are integral to each chapter, the majority of which consist of auxiliary results, extensions of the theory, examples, and counterexamples. Problems which are highly theoretical have accompanying hints. The last section of each chapter of Part II consists of Additional Propositions containing auxiliary and complementary results. The entire book contains collections of suggested readings at the end of each chapter in order to highlight alternate approaches, proofs, and routes toward additional results. With modest prerequisites, this text is intended to meet the needs of a contemporary course in measure theory for mathematics students and is also accessible to a wider student audience, namely those in statistics, economics, engineering, and physics. Part I may be also accessible to advanced undergraduates who fulfill the prerequisites which include an introductory course in analysis, linear algebra (Chapter 5 only), and elementary set theory.
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Preface -- Part I. Introduction to Measure and Integration.-1. Measurable Functions -- 2. Measure on a σ-Algebra -- 3. Integral of Nonnegative Functions -- 4. Integral of Real-Valued Functions -- 5. Banach Spaces Lp -- 6. Convergence of Functions -- 7. Decomposition of Measures -- 8. Extension of Measures -- 9. Product Measures -- Part II -- 10. Remarks on Integrals -- 11. Borel Measure -- 12. Representation Theorems -- 13. Invariant Measures -- References -- Index.

Classical in its approach, this textbook is thoughtfully designed and composed in two parts. Part I is meant for a one-semester beginning graduate course in measure theory, proposing an “abstract” approach to measure and integration, where the classical concrete cases of Lebesgue measure and Lebesgue integral are presented as an important particular case of general theory. Part II of the text is more advanced and is addressed to a more experienced reader. The material is designed to cover another one-semester graduate course subsequent to a first course, dealing with measure and integration in topological spaces. The final section of each chapter in Part I presents problems that are integral to each chapter, the majority of which consist of auxiliary results, extensions of the theory, examples, and counterexamples. Problems which are highly theoretical have accompanying hints. The last section of each chapter of Part II consists of Additional Propositions containing auxiliary and complementary results. The entire book contains collections of suggested readings at the end of each chapter in order to highlight alternate approaches, proofs, and routes toward additional results. With modest prerequisites, this text is intended to meet the needs of a contemporary course in measure theory for mathematics students and is also accessible to a wider student audience, namely those in statistics, economics, engineering, and physics. Part I may be also accessible to advanced undergraduates who fulfill the prerequisites which include an introductory course in analysis, linear algebra (Chapter 5 only), and elementary set theory.

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