Mathematical theorem
In real analysis and measure theory, the Vitali convergence theorem, named after the Italian mathematician Giuseppe Vitali, is a generalization of the better-known dominated convergence theorem of Henri Lebesgue. It is a characterization of the convergence in Lp in terms of convergence in measure and a condition related to uniform integrability.
Preliminary definitions
[edit] Let
be a measure space, i.e.
is a set function such that
and
is countably-additive. All functions considered in the sequel will be functions
, where
or
. We adopt the following definitions according to Bogachev's terminology.[1]
- A set of functions
is called uniformly integrable if
, i.e
. - A set of functions
is said to have uniformly absolutely continuous integrals if
, i.e.
. This definition is sometimes used as a definition of uniform integrability. However, it differs from the definition of uniform integrability given above.
When
, a set of functions
is uniformly integrable if and only if it is bounded in
and has uniformly absolutely continuous integrals. If, in addition,
is atomless, then the uniform integrability is equivalent to the uniform absolute continuity of integrals.
Finite measure case
[edit] Let
be a measure space with
. Let
and
be an
-measurable function. Then, the following are equivalent :
and
converges to
in
; - The sequence of functions
converges in
-measure to
and
is uniformly integrable ;
For a proof, see Bogachev's monograph "Measure Theory, Volume I".[1]
Infinite measure case
[edit] Let
be a measure space and
. Let
and
. Then,
converges to
in
if and only if the following holds :
- The sequence of functions
converges in
-measure to
;
has uniformly absolutely continuous integrals; - For every
, there exists
such that
and 
When
, the third condition becomes superfluous (one can simply take
) and the first two conditions give the usual form of Lebesgue-Vitali's convergence theorem originally stated for measure spaces with finite measure. In this case, one can show that conditions 1 and 2 imply that the sequence
is uniformly integrable.
Converse of the theorem
[edit] Let
be measure space. Let
and assume that
exists for every
. Then, the sequence
is bounded in
and has uniformly absolutely continuous integrals. In addition, there exists
such that
for every
.
When
, this implies that
is uniformly integrable.
For a proof, see Bogachev's monograph "Measure Theory, Volume I".[1]