lahanadar
- 22
- 2
Hi everybody. Can anyone help me to clarify these things? The definition of F-measurable function is as this:
f:Ω→ℝ defined on (Ω,F,P) probability space is F-measurable if f-1(B)={ω∈Ω: f(ω)∈B} ∈ F for all B∈B(ℝ)
where B(ℝ) is Borel field over ℝ and B is any Borel subset of the Borel field.
My confusions are:
1-Is the function f:Ω→ℝ 1-to-1?
2-Is f-1(B):B(ℝ)→F mapping to mutually exclusive and collectively exhaustive subsets of F?
Thank you for any contributions.
f:Ω→ℝ defined on (Ω,F,P) probability space is F-measurable if f-1(B)={ω∈Ω: f(ω)∈B} ∈ F for all B∈B(ℝ)
where B(ℝ) is Borel field over ℝ and B is any Borel subset of the Borel field.
My confusions are:
1-Is the function f:Ω→ℝ 1-to-1?
2-Is f-1(B):B(ℝ)→F mapping to mutually exclusive and collectively exhaustive subsets of F?
Thank you for any contributions.