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Sonia Gay

Sonia Gay

Answered question

2022-06-26

Let f n L 1 be a seq of nonnegative functions s.t f n f a.e ptwise. Show lim n ( m i n ( f , f n ) d μ = f d μ.
For this, I wanted to use the dominated convergence theorem.
I have shown that m i n ( f , f n ) converges to f pointwise since | f f n | | f m i n ( f , f n ) | .
Moreover, | m i n ( f , f n ) | = m i n ( f , f n ) f. But I cannot use the dominated convergence theorem directly since the integral of f may not be finite. Is there a way to fix this?

Answer & Explanation

g2joey15

g2joey15

Beginner2022-06-27Added 21 answers

You will need more assumptions for DCT to work. For example suppose μ is the Lebesgue measure on R . Now let f n = 1 [ n , n ] be the indicator function for the set [ n , n ]. f n is L 1 and f n f 1 point wise. Hence DCT will not always work.

Instead you want to use the monotone convergence theorem. Specifically, define

g n ( x ) = inf k n min ( f ( x ) , f k ( x ) ) .

Now g n is an increasing positive sequence and g n f. So we have that

g n d μ f d μ .

Finally we see that for each n

g n d μ min ( f , f n ) d μ f d μ

Thus, we have min ( f , f n ) d μ f d μ.

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