Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 The Neo-Laplacian Approach to Statistical Mechanics
- Chapter 2 Subjectivism and the Ergodic Approach
- Chapter 3 The Haar Measure
- Chapter 4 Measure and Topology in Statistical Mechanics
- Chapter 5 Three Solutions
- Appendix I Mathematical Preliminaries
- Appendix II On the Foundations of Probability
- Appendix III Probability in Nonequilibrium Statistical Mechanics
- Author Index
- Subject Index
Appendix I - Mathematical Preliminaries
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 November 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 The Neo-Laplacian Approach to Statistical Mechanics
- Chapter 2 Subjectivism and the Ergodic Approach
- Chapter 3 The Haar Measure
- Chapter 4 Measure and Topology in Statistical Mechanics
- Chapter 5 Three Solutions
- Appendix I Mathematical Preliminaries
- Appendix II On the Foundations of Probability
- Appendix III Probability in Nonequilibrium Statistical Mechanics
- Author Index
- Subject Index
Summary
ELEMENTARY MEASURE THEORY
Let S be a set. A collection B0 of subsets of S is called an algebra iff:
If A, A' ∈ B0, then A ∩ A' ∈ B0 and A ∪ A' ∈ B0.
If A ∈ B0, then S\A ∈ B0.
S ∈ B0.
A collection B is called a σ-algebra if it is an algebra and, in addition,
if {An} is a countable collection of subsets of S such that, for every n, An ∈ B, then ∪nAn ∈ B.
A measurable space is a structure 〈S,B〉, where S is a set and B is a σ-algebra of subsets of S.
Let 〈S,B〉 be a measurable space. A finitely additive measure is a function m: B→[0,∞) such that:
If A,A' ∈ B and A ∩ A' = Ø, then m(A ∪ A') = m(A) + m(A').
m(Ø) = 0.
If m(S) < ∞, m is a finite measure. If m(S) = 1 m is a normalized probability measure.
m is a measure if it is a finitely additive measure and, in addition,
If {An} ⊆ B is a countable collection of mutually exclusive measurable sets, then m(∪nAn) = Σnm(An) (σ-additivity).
〈S,B,m〉 is called a measure space.
Theorem (Caratheodory). If m is a σ-additive measure on an algebra B0, it can be extended, uniquely, to a measure on the σ-algebra that extends B0.
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- The Concept of Probability in Statistical Physics , pp. 217 - 223Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999