Absolute continuity
In calculus, absolute continuity is a smoothness property of functions that is stronger than continuity and uniform continuity. The notion of absolute continuity allows one to obtain generalizations of the relationship between the two central operations of calculus, differentiation and integration, expressed by the fundamental theorem of calculus in the framework of Riemann integration. Such generalizations are often formulated in terms of Lebesgue integration. For real-valued functions on the real line two interrelated notions appear: absolute continuity of functions and absolute continuity of measures. These two notions are generalized in different directions. The usual derivative of a function is related to the Radon–Nikodym derivative, or density, of a measure.
We have the following chains of inclusions for functions over a compact subset of the real line:
and:
- Continuously differentiable ⊆ Lipschitz continuous ⊆ absolutely continuous ⊆ bounded variation ⊆ differentiable almost everywhere
Contents
Absolute continuity of functions
A continuous function fails to be absolutely continuous if it fails to be uniformly continuous – examples are tan(x) over [0, ), exp(x) over the entire real line, and sin(1/x) over (0, 1]). But there is another way for a continuous function f to fail to be absolutely continuous – if it is differentiable almost everywhere in an interval and its derivative f ′ is Lebesgue integrable, but the integral of f ′ differs from the increment of f. For example, this happens for the Cantor function.
Definition
Let be an interval in the real line . A function is absolutely continuous on if for every positive number , there is a positive number such that whenever a finite sequence of pairwise disjoint sub-intervals of satisfies[1]
then
The collection of all absolutely continuous functions on is denoted .
Equivalent definitions
The following conditions on a real-valued function f on a compact interval [a,b] are equivalent:[2]
- (1) f is absolutely continuous;
- (2) f has a derivative f ′ almost everywhere, the derivative is Lebesgue integrable, and
- for all x on [a,b];
- (3) there exists a Lebesgue integrable function g on [a,b] such that
- for all x on [a,b].
If these equivalent conditions are satisfied then necessarily g = f ′ almost everywhere.
Equivalence between (1) and (3) is known as the fundamental theorem of Lebesgue integral calculus, due to Lebesgue.[3]
For an equivalent definition in terms of measures see the section Relation between the two notions of absolute continuity.
Properties
- The sum and difference of two absolutely continuous functions are also absolutely continuous. If the two functions are defined on a bounded closed interval, then their product is also absolutely continuous.[4]
- If an absolutely continuous function is defined on a bounded closed interval and is nowhere zero then its reciprocal is absolutely continuous.[5]
- Every absolutely continuous function is uniformly continuous and, therefore, continuous. Every Lipschitz-continuous function is absolutely continuous.[6]
- If f: [a,b] → R is absolutely continuous, then it is of bounded variation on [a,b].[7]
- If f: [a,b] → R is absolutely continuous, then it has the Luzin N property (that is, for any such that , it holds that , where stands for the Lebesgue measure on R).
- f: I → R is absolutely continuous if and only if it is continuous, is of bounded variation and has the Luzin N property.
Examples
The following functions are continuous everywhere but not absolutely continuous:
- the Cantor function;
- the function
-
- on a finite interval containing the origin;
- the function f(x) = x 2 on an unbounded interval.
Generalizations
Let (X, d) be a metric space and let I be an interval in the real line R. A function f: I → X is absolutely continuous on I if for every positive number , there is a positive number such that whenever a finite sequence of pairwise disjoint sub-intervals [xk, yk] of I satisfies
then
The collection of all absolutely continuous functions from I into X is denoted AC(I; X).
A further generalization is the space ACp(I; X) of curves f: I → X such that[8]
for some m in the Lp space Lp(I).
Properties of these generalizations
- Every absolutely continuous function is uniformly continuous and, therefore, continuous. Every Lipschitz-continuous function is absolutely continuous.
- If f: [a,b] → X is absolutely continuous, then it is of bounded variation on [a,b].
- For f ∈ ACp(I; X), the metric derivative of f exists for λ-almost all times in I, and the metric derivative is the smallest m ∈ Lp(I; R) such that[9]
Absolute continuity of measures
Definition
A measure on Borel subsets of the real line is absolutely continuous with respect to Lebesgue measure (in other words, dominated by ) if for every measurable set , implies . This is written as .
In most applications, if a measure on the real line is simply said to be absolutely continuous — without specifying with respect to which other measure it is absolutely continuous — then absolute continuity with respect to Lebesgue measure is meant.
The same holds for
Equivalent definitions
The following conditions on a finite measure μ on Borel subsets of the real line are equivalent:[10]
- (1) μ is absolutely continuous;
- (2) for every positive number ε there is a positive number δ such that μ(A) < ε for all Borel sets A of Lebesgue measure less than δ;
- (3) there exists a Lebesgue integrable function g on the real line such that
- for all Borel subsets A of the real line.
For an equivalent definition in terms of functions see the section Relation between the two notions of absolute continuity.
Any other function satisfying (3) is equal to g almost everywhere. Such a function is called Radon–Nikodym derivative, or density, of the absolutely continuous measure μ.
Equivalence between (1), (2) and (3) holds also in Rn for all n=1,2,3,...
Thus, the absolutely continuous measures on Rn are precisely those that have densities; as a special case, the absolutely continuous probability measures are precisely the ones that have probability density functions.
Generalizations
If μ and ν are two measures on the same measurable space then μ is said to be absolutely continuous with respect to ν, or dominated by ν if μ(A) = 0 for every set A for which ν(A) = 0.[11] This is written as “μ ν”. In symbols:
Absolute continuity of measures is reflexive and transitive, but is not antisymmetric, so it is a preorder rather than a partial order. Instead, if μ ν and ν μ, the measures μ and ν are said to be equivalent. Thus absolute continuity induces a partial ordering of such equivalence classes.
If μ is a signed or complex measure, it is said that μ is absolutely continuous with respect to ν if its variation |μ| satisfies |μ| ≪ ν; equivalently, if every set A for which ν(A) = 0 is μ-null.
The Radon–Nikodym theorem[12] states that if μ is absolutely continuous with respect to ν, and both measures are σ-finite, then μ has a density, or "Radon-Nikodym derivative", with respect to ν, which means that there exists a ν-measurable function f taking values in [0, +∞), denoted by f = dμ/dν, such that for any ν-measurable set A we have
Singular measures
Via Lebesgue's decomposition theorem,[13] every measure can be decomposed into the sum of an absolutely continuous measure and a singular measure. See singular measure for examples of measures that are not absolutely continuous.
Relation between the two notions of absolute continuity
A finite measure μ on Borel subsets of the real line is absolutely continuous with respect to Lebesgue measure if and only if the point function
is an absolutely continuous real function. More generally, a function is locally (it means, on every bounded interval) absolutely continuous if and only if its distributional derivative is a measure that is absolutely continuous with respect to the Lebesgue measure.
If the absolute continuity holds then the Radon-Nikodym derivative of μ is equal almost everywhere to the derivative of F.[14]
More generally, the measure μ is assumed to be locally finite (rather than finite) and F(x) is defined as μ((0,x]) for x>0, 0 for x=0, and -μ((x,0]) for x<0. In this case μ is the Lebesgue-Stieltjes measure generated by F.[15] The relation between the two notions of absolute continuity still holds.[16]
Notes
- ↑ Royden 1988, Sect. 5.4, page 108; Nielsen 1997, Definition 15.6 on page 251; Athreya & Lahiri 2006, Definitions 4.4.1, 4.4.2 on pages 128,129. The interval is assumed to be bounded and closed in the former two books but not the latter book.
- ↑ Nielsen 1997, Theorem 20.8 on page 354; also Royden 1988, Sect. 5.4, page 110 and Athreya & Lahiri 2006, Theorems 4.4.1, 4.4.2 on pages 129,130.
- ↑ Athreya & Lahiri 2006, before Theorem 4.4.1 on page 129.
- ↑ Royden 1988, Problem 5.14(a,b) on page 111.
- ↑ Royden 1988, Problem 5.14(c) on page 111.
- ↑ Royden 1988, Problem 5.20(a) on page 112.
- ↑ Royden 1988, Lemma 5.11 on page 108.
- ↑ Ambrosio, Gigli & Savaré 2005, Definition 1.1.1 on page 23
- ↑ Ambrosio, Gigli & Savaré 2005, Theorem 1.1.2 on page 24
- ↑ Equivalence between (1) and (2) is a special case of Nielsen 1997, Proposition 15.5 on page 251 (fails for σ-finite measures); equivalence between (1) and (3) is a special case of the Radon–Nikodym theorem, see Nielsen 1997, Theorem 15.4 on page 251 or Athreya & Lahiri 2006, Item (ii) of Theorem 4.1.1 on page 115 (still holds for σ-finite measures).
- ↑ Nielsen 1997, Definition 15.3 on page 250; Royden 1988, Sect. 11.6, page 276; Athreya & Lahiri 2006, Definition 4.1.1 on page 113.
- ↑ Royden 1988, Theorem 11.23 on page 276; Nielsen 1997, Theorem 15.4 on page 251; Athreya & Lahiri 2006, Item (ii) of Theorem 4.1.1 on page 115.
- ↑ Royden 1988, Proposition 11.24 on page 278; Nielsen 1997, Theorem 15.14 on page 262; Athreya & Lahiri 2006, Item (i) of Theorem 4.1.1 on page 115.
- ↑ Royden 1988, Problem 12.17(b) on page 303.
- ↑ Athreya & Lahiri 2006, Sect. 1.3.2, page 26.
- ↑ Nielsen 1997, Proposition 15.7 on page 252; Athreya & Lahiri 2006, Theorem 4.4.3 on page 131; Royden 1988, Problem 12.17(a) on page 303.
References
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