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kramberol

kramberol

Answered question

2022-07-04

Suppose E R d and O n is the open set
O n = { x R d : d ( x , E ) < 1 n }
If E is compact, then m ( E ) = lim n m ( O n ) . I wonder what are some examples that this equality does not hold when E is closed and unbounded, or E is open and bounded.

Answer & Explanation

Charlee Gentry

Charlee Gentry

Beginner2022-07-05Added 19 answers

For the case of open and bounded E take E = [ 0 , 1 ] C where C is a fat Cantor set with 0 < m ( C ) < 1. Then m ( O n ) m ( E ¯ ) = 1 whereas m ( E ) < 1.
rjawbreakerca

rjawbreakerca

Beginner2022-07-06Added 5 answers

For closed and unbounded case:

Take d = 1, E = N . Then O n = k N ( k 1 / n , k + 1 / n ), where the sets are pairwise disjoint for n 2, for example.

For any fixed n 2, m ( O n ) = k = 1 2 n = 2 n k = 1 1 = + . But m ( N ) = 0.

PS: In the general case, take E to be any sequence of different points in R d going to infinity.

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