ak416
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This is non measurable right?
The discussion revolves around the measurability of the Cartesian product of non-measurable sets within the context of measure theory. Participants explore definitions and implications of product measures, particularly in relation to finite and infinite products of sets in measure spaces.
Participants express differing views on the implications of non-measurable sets and the nature of product measures. There is no consensus on whether the product of non-measurable sets is necessarily non-measurable, and multiple competing views remain throughout the discussion.
Participants acknowledge limitations in their understanding of formal definitions related to measure spaces and product measures, which may affect the clarity of their arguments.
ak416 said:ok I am not so familiar with the formal definition of a measure space and the product measure.
From the description you are giving of your question, it doesn't look like you mean cartesian product at all, but rather intersection or union - I can't make out which. Try to get your terminology straightened out.I was think more of something like this: given a finite number of non measurable sets in R (S1,...,Sn), their cartesian product is measurable ( By non measurable in R I mean the outer measure, m*S = inf{sum over k (|Ik|) : {Ik} is a countable covering of S by open intervals } is not equal to the inner measure (instead you take sup and closed intervals contained inside the set). Or an equivalent way of saying a set S in R is measurable is to say that for an X in R, m*X = m8(X intersect S) + m*(X intersect S complement) (so if there's no equality its nonmeasurable). In Rn you use rectangles instead of intervals.
Except in trivial cases, you cannot define the product measure to only allow products of measurable sets to be measurable, because the union of measurable sets must be measurable, and the union of two products is generally not itself a product, e.g. [0,1]x[0,1] U [1,2]x[1,2] is not a product.ak416 said:well from what i read in a more advanced textbook, is that a measure space is a set equipped with a measure function (with certain properties) that is defined on a sigma algebra (which defines the collection of measurable sets in the space). So ya, obviously, if you define the product measure in a way that only allows products of measurable sets to be measurable sets in the product measure, then by definition its true...By I was trying to see this from more of a different view, like using the definitions of lebesgue outer and inner measure, and also I am wondering if an infinite product of nonmeasurable sets would be non measurable in this way (product or box topology kind of product).
Thanks. I'll have to think about this.ak416 said:In R2 instead of intervals for the outer and inner measure, rectangles are used (higher dimensional rectangles are used for Rn, and for an arbitrary product of subsets of R we would use the basis elements of the product topology, i guess this is most natural)
Yes, I know, that part of my post was addressed to matt grimeok about your counterexample, B is measurable (a zero set) so this doesn't disprove that if both A and B are non measurable then AxB is nonmeasurable.