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Recent questions in High school statistics
High school statisticsAnswered question
inhiba5f inhiba5f 2022-09-08

In what sense is Lebesgue integral the "most general"?
[ UPDATE: This question is apparently really easy to misinterpret. I already know about things like the Henstock-Kurzweil integral, etc. I'm asking if the Lebesgue integral (i.e. the general measure-theoretic integral) can be precisely characterized as "the most general integral that can be defined naturally on an arbitrary measurable space." ]
Apologies as I don't have that much of a background in real analysis. These questions may be stupid from the point of view of someone who knows this stuff; if so, just say so.
My layman's understanding of various integrals is that the Lebesgue integral is the "most general" integral you can define when your domain is an arbitrary measure space, but that if your domain has some extra structure, like for instance if it's Rn, then you can define integrals for a wider class of functions than the measurable ones, e.g. the Henstock-Kurzweil or Khintchine integrals.
[ EDIT: To clarify, by the "Lebesgue integral" I mean the general measure-theoretic integral defined for arbitrary Borel-measurable functions on arbitrary measure spaces, rather than just the special case defined when the domain is equipped with the Lebesgue measure. ]
My question: is there a theorem saying that no sufficiently natural integral defined on arbitrary measure spaces can (1) satisfy the usual conditions and integral should, (2) agree with the Lebesgue measure for measurable functions, and (3) integrate at least one non-measurable function? Or, conversely, is this false? Of course this hinges on the correct definition of "sufficiently natural," but I assume it's not too hard to render that statement into abstract nonsense.
Such an integral would, I guess, have to somehow "detect" sigma algebras looking like those of R n and somehow act on this.
[ EDIT 2: To clarify, by an "integral" I mean a function that takes as input ( ( Ω , Σ , μ ) , f ), where ( Ω , Σ , μ ) is any measure space and f : ( Ω , Σ ) ( R , B ) is a measurable function, and outputs a number, subject to the obvious conditions. ]
UPDATE: The following silly example would satisfy all of my criteria except naturality:
Let ( Ω , Σ , μ ) be a measure space, let B denote the Borel measure on R, and let f : ( Ω , Σ ) ( R , B ) be a Borel-measurable function. Define
Ω f d μ := { the Khintchine integral if  ( Ω , Σ , μ ) = ( R , L , μ Lebesgue ) ; the Lebesgue integral otherwise.

High school statisticsAnswered question
Beckett Henry Beckett Henry 2022-09-04

Find out the angular speed in terms of time.
Here is the equation that describes the motion of a planet under the gravitational field generated by a fixed star: u = e l cos θ + 1 l , where u is the reciprocal of the radial distance between the planet and the star, e is the eccentricity of the orbit, l is the semi latus rectum, and let h denote the angular momentum per unit mass, θ is the angular coordinate. e,h,l turn out to be independent from one another, and they are independent from t and θ. At time t=0, we let the radial speed vanish, and we also let the angular coordinate vanish. To find the relationship between time and angular speed ω, we assume that u is a smooth fuction of t, and differentiate u w.r.t. t, and use ω = h u 2 to find out an expression for ω. To do this we can differentiate u w.r.t. θ first then multiply it by ω, which equals to h u 2 .
Then differentiate the first derivate of u w.r.t θ first, then multiply the result by hu2 and so on. Since the whole process involves the differentiation w.r.t. θ only, we can assume that e=0.5,l=h=1. We set e=0.5 only because we wish to study bounded orbits so that we can apply Kepler's law and verify our result. However, the whole process is time consuming since the formula for the derivatives of u becomes complicated very quickly, even if we assume explicit values for e,l,h. The only effective way, therefore, is to design an algorithm for this process. But I do not have any knowlege about computer science, if anyone knows how to design algorithms or know about some other ways to find out ω in terms of t, please share.

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