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Marczewski-Burstin-like characterizations of σ-algebras, ideals, and measurable functions

Jack Brown, Hussain Elalaoui-Talibi (1999)

Colloquium Mathematicae

ℒ denotes the Lebesgue measurable subsets of ℝ and 0 denotes the sets of Lebesgue measure 0. In 1914 Burstin showed that a set M ⊆ ℝ belongs to ℒ if and only if every perfect P ∈ ℒ$ℒ0 h a s a p e r f e c t s u b s e t Q $ 0 which is a subset of or misses M (a similar statement omitting “is a subset of or” characterizes 0 ). In 1935, Marczewski used similar language to define the σ-algebra (s) which we now call the “Marczewski measurable sets” and the σ-ideal ( s 0 ) which we call the “Marczewski null sets”. M ∈ (s) if every perfect set P has...

Multipliers of spaces of derivatives

Jan Mařík, Clifford E. Weil (2004)

Mathematica Bohemica

For subspaces, X and Y , of the space, D , of all derivatives M ( X , Y ) denotes the set of all g D such that f g Y for all f X . Subspaces of D are defined depending on a parameter p [ 0 , ] . In Section 6, M ( X , D ) is determined for each of these subspaces and in Section 7, M ( X , Y ) is found for X and Y any of these subspaces. In Section 3, M ( X , D ) is determined for other spaces of functions on [ 0 , 1 ] related to continuity and higher order differentiation.

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