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A course on Borel sets

The roots of Borel sets go back to the work of Baire [8]. He was trying to come to grips with the abstract notion of a function introduced by Dirich­ let and Riemann. According to them, a function was to be an arbitrary correspondence between objects without giving any method or procedure by which t...

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Autor principal: Srivastava, S M
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: Springer 1998
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-85473-6
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2023463
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author Srivastava, S M
author_facet Srivastava, S M
author_sort Srivastava, S M
collection CERN
description The roots of Borel sets go back to the work of Baire [8]. He was trying to come to grips with the abstract notion of a function introduced by Dirich­ let and Riemann. According to them, a function was to be an arbitrary correspondence between objects without giving any method or procedure by which the correspondence could be established. Since all the specific functions that one studied were determined by simple analytic expressions, Baire delineated those functions that can be constructed starting from con­ tinuous functions and iterating the operation 0/ pointwise limit on a se­ quence 0/ functions. These functions are now known as Baire functions. Lebesgue [65] and Borel [19] continued this work. In [19], Borel sets were defined for the first time. In his paper, Lebesgue made a systematic study of Baire functions and introduced many tools and techniques that are used even today. Among other results, he showed that Borel functions coincide with Baire functions. The study of Borel sets got an impetus from an error in Lebesgue's paper, which was spotted by Souslin. Lebesgue was trying to prove the following: Suppose / : )R2 -- R is a Baire function such that for every x, the equation /(x,y) = 0 has a. unique solution. Then y as a function 0/ x defined by the above equation is Baire.
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spelling cern-20234632021-04-21T20:13:13Zdoi:10.1007/978-3-642-85473-6http://cds.cern.ch/record/2023463engSrivastava, S MA course on Borel setsMathematical Physics and MathematicsThe roots of Borel sets go back to the work of Baire [8]. He was trying to come to grips with the abstract notion of a function introduced by Dirich­ let and Riemann. According to them, a function was to be an arbitrary correspondence between objects without giving any method or procedure by which the correspondence could be established. Since all the specific functions that one studied were determined by simple analytic expressions, Baire delineated those functions that can be constructed starting from con­ tinuous functions and iterating the operation 0/ pointwise limit on a se­ quence 0/ functions. These functions are now known as Baire functions. Lebesgue [65] and Borel [19] continued this work. In [19], Borel sets were defined for the first time. In his paper, Lebesgue made a systematic study of Baire functions and introduced many tools and techniques that are used even today. Among other results, he showed that Borel functions coincide with Baire functions. The study of Borel sets got an impetus from an error in Lebesgue's paper, which was spotted by Souslin. Lebesgue was trying to prove the following: Suppose / : )R2 -- R is a Baire function such that for every x, the equation /(x,y) = 0 has a. unique solution. Then y as a function 0/ x defined by the above equation is Baire.Springeroai:cds.cern.ch:20234631998
spellingShingle Mathematical Physics and Mathematics
Srivastava, S M
A course on Borel sets
title A course on Borel sets
title_full A course on Borel sets
title_fullStr A course on Borel sets
title_full_unstemmed A course on Borel sets
title_short A course on Borel sets
title_sort course on borel sets
topic Mathematical Physics and Mathematics
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-85473-6
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2023463
work_keys_str_mv AT srivastavasm acourseonborelsets
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