Jordan measure
Encyclopedia : J : JO : JOR : Jordan measure
In mathematics, the Jordan measure (also known as the Jordan content) is an extension of the notion of size (length, area, volume) to shapes more complicated than, for example, a triangle, disk, or parallelipiped.
It turns out that for a set to have Jordan measure it should be well-behaved in a certain restrictive sense. For this reason, it is now more common to work with the Lebesgue measure, which is an extension of the Jordan measure to a larger class of sets. Historically speaking, Jordan measure came first, towards the end of the nineteenth century.
Jordan measure of \"simple sets\"
Consider the Euclidean space Rn. One starts by considering products of bounded intervals- [C=[a_1, b_1)\times [a_2, b_2) \times \cdots \times [a_n, b_n)]
- [m(C)=(b_1-a_1)(b_2-a_2) \cdots(b_n-a_n).]
- [S=C_1\cup C_2\cup \cdots \cup C_k]
Extension to more complicated sets
Notice that a set which is a product of closed intervals,
- [[a_1, b_1]\times [a_2, b_2] \times \cdots \times [a_n, b_n]]
Formally, for a bounded set B, define its inner Jordan measure as
- [m_*(B)=\sup_ m (S)]
- [m^*(B)=\inf_ m (S)]
It turns out that all rectangles (with or without boundary), as well all balls, simplexes, etc., are Jordan measurable. Also, if one considers two continuous functions, the set of points between the graphs of those functions is Jordan measurable as long as that set is bounded. Any finite union and intersection of Jordan sets is measurable, as well as the set difference of any two Jordan measurable sets. One can also prove that a bounded set is Jordan measurable if and only if its boundary is Jordan measurable and has Jordan measure zero.
The Lebesgue measure
This last property greatly limits the types of sets which are Jordan measurable. For example, the set of rational numbers contained in the interval [0, 1] is then not Jordan measurable, as its boundary is [0, 1] which is not of Jordan measure zero. Intuitively however, the set of rational numbers is a "small" set, as it is countable, and it should have "size" zero. That is indeed true, but if one replaces the Jordan measure with the Lebesgue measure. The Lebesgue measure of a set is the same as its Jordan measure as long as that set has a Jordan measure. However, the Lebesgue measure is defined for a much wider class of sets, like the set of rational numbers in an interval mentioned earlier, and also for sets which may be unbounded or fractals.
External links
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
