bham10246
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Hi, it's been awhile since I have studied Lebesgue measure so I'm trying to re-learn the material on my own. Most of my friends don't remember much as well so it's been a bit of a struggle trying to work on these problems on my own. Thank you for any kind of help!
OMIT Question 1. If f:[a,b]\rightarrow \mathbb{R} is absolutely continuous and one-to-one, then is f^{-1} absolutely continuous? If so, prove. If not, provide a counterexample.
OMIT Question 2. If f:[a,b]\rightarrow [c,d] is 1-1 and absolutely continuous, then
OMIT a. is f^{-1} of bounded variation on [c,d]?
OMIT b. if E \subseteq [c,d] and m(E)=0, then do you think m(f^{-1}(E))=0? If I know that f^{-1} is absolutely continuous, then I can prove that f^{-1} sends sets of measure zero to sets of measure zero...
Question 3. Let f:[0,1] \rightarrow\mathbb{R} satisfy |f(x) - f(y)|\leq |x^{1/3}-y^{1/3}| for all x,y \in [0,1]. Must f be absolutely continuous? Justify.
My question 3 is hard...
Edit: I removed the last problem which I eventually figured out...
OMIT Question 1. If f:[a,b]\rightarrow \mathbb{R} is absolutely continuous and one-to-one, then is f^{-1} absolutely continuous? If so, prove. If not, provide a counterexample.
OMIT Question 2. If f:[a,b]\rightarrow [c,d] is 1-1 and absolutely continuous, then
OMIT a. is f^{-1} of bounded variation on [c,d]?
OMIT b. if E \subseteq [c,d] and m(E)=0, then do you think m(f^{-1}(E))=0? If I know that f^{-1} is absolutely continuous, then I can prove that f^{-1} sends sets of measure zero to sets of measure zero...
Question 3. Let f:[0,1] \rightarrow\mathbb{R} satisfy |f(x) - f(y)|\leq |x^{1/3}-y^{1/3}| for all x,y \in [0,1]. Must f be absolutely continuous? Justify.
My question 3 is hard...
Edit: I removed the last problem which I eventually figured out...
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