Real Analysis: A Course in
Real Analysis: A Course in
Real Analysis: A Course in
Real Analysis
SECOND EDITION
A Course in
Real Analysis
SECOND EDITION
John N. McDonald
School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences
Arizona State University
Neil A. Weiss
School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences
Arizona State University
2011037823
Photo Credits
Cover image courtesy of iStockphoto; page xii photo courtesy of Andrew Sherwood;
page xiii photo courtesy of Carol Weiss; page 2 photo courtesy of Wikipedia; page 28
photo courtesy of Wikipedia; page 80 photo courtesy of Wikipedia; page 110 photo
courtesy of Wikipedia; page 144 photo courtesy of Wikipedia; page 178 photo
courtesy of Professor Catterina Dagnino, Dipartimento di Matematica, Universit`
a di
Torino; page 224 photo courtesy of Sovfoto/Eastfoto, Inc.; page 268 photo courtesy
of Wikipedia; page 302 photo courtesy of Dr. Brigitte Bukovics; page 356 photo
courtesy of Universit
atsbibliothek Bonn; page 396 photo courtesy of Wikipedia;
page 424 photo courtesy of UPI/Corbis-Bettmann; page 452 photo courtesy
of Wikipedia; page 496 photo reprinted with permission from E. Jakimowicz,
A. Miranowicz (eds.), Stefan Banach Remarkable Life, Brilliant Mathematics
(Gda
nsk University Press, Gda
nsk, 2010); page 550 photo courtesy of Professor
Ingrid Daubechies, Department of Mathematics, Princeton University; page 602
photo courtesy of Mary Elizabeth Shannon; page 632 photo courtesy of Nigel
Lesmoir-Gordon.
Contents
PART ONE
xii
xv
SET THEORY
Biography: Georg Cantor
1.1 Basic Denitions and Properties
1.2
2
3
10
17
22
28
29
2.2
35
47
2.4
54
Real-Valued Functions
61
2.6
67
vii
viii
Contents
PART TWO
3
Biography: Emile
Felix-Edouard-Justin
Borel
3.1
89
3.3
94
110
111
121
129
139
101
81
80
144
145
151
158
165
5.5
174
Convergence in Measure
178
179
191
6.3
201
6.4
212
ELEMENTS OF PROBABILITY
Biography: Andrei Nikolaevich Kolmogorov
224
225
236
7.3
247
7.4
257
Contents
ix
268
269
281
285
8.4
292
303
311
9.3
321
332
342
PART THREE
10
302
356
357
363
10.3
370
Weak Topologies
373
379
386
391
11
396
397
401
11.3
406
410
415
Contents
12
424
425
429
433
12.3
438
12.5
442
13
446
452
453
458
468
13.4
L -Spaces
14
475
483
491
496
497
505
511
520
530
14.6
537
PART FOUR
15
550
551
558
15.3
565
575
15.5
583
15.6
Introduction to Wavelets
588
593
Contents
xi
16
602
603
611
16.3
16.4
618
625
17
632
633
638
643
17.4 Fractals
648
Index
655
xii
xiii
Preface
This book is about real analysis, but it is not an ordinary real analysis book.
Written with the student in mind, it incorporates pedagogical techniques not
often found in books at this level.
In brief, A Course in Real Analysis is a modern graduate-level or advancedundergraduate-level textbook about real analysis that engages its readers with
motivation of key concepts, hundreds of examples, over 1300 exercises, and applications to probability and statistics, Fourier analysis, wavelets, measurable
dynamical systems, Hausdor measure, and fractals.
xvi
Preface
Abundant and varied exercises. The book contains over 1300 exercises, not
including parts, that vary widely with regard to application and level.
Applications. Diverse applications appear throughout the text, some as examples and others as entire sections or chapters. For instance, applications to
probability theory are ubiquitous. Other applications include those to statistics,
Fourier analysis, wavelets, measurable dynamical systems, Hausdor measure,
and fractals.
Careful referencing. As an aid to eective use of the book, references (including page numbers) to denitions, examples, exercises, and results are consistently
provided. Additionally, post-referenced exercises are marked with a star (); all
such exercises are strongly recommended for solution by the reader.
Biographies. Each chapter begins with a biography of a famous mathematician. In addition to being of general interest, these biographies help the reader
obtain a perspective on how real analysis and its applications have developed.
Preface
xvii
Organization
A Course in Real Analysis oers considerable exibility in the choice of material
to cover. The following list is a brief explanation of the organization of the text.
Chapters 1 and 2 present prerequisite material that may be review for many
students but provide a common ground for all readers. At the option of the
instructor, these two chapters can be covered either briey or in detail; they
can also be assigned to the students for independent reading.
Chapters 36 present the elements of measure and integration by rst discussing the Lebesgue theory on the line (Chapters 3 and 4) and then the
abstract theory (Chapters 5 and 6). This material is prerequisite to all subsequent chapters.
Chapter 7 presents an introduction to probability theory that includes the
mathematical model for probability, random variables, expectation, and laws
of large numbers. Although optional, this chapter is recommended as it provides a myriad of examples and applications for other topics.
In Chapters 8 and 9, dierentiation of functions and dierentiation of measures
are discussed, respectively. Topics examined include dierentiability, bounded
variation, absolute continuity of functions, signed and complex measures, the
Radon-Nikodym theorem, decomposition of measures, and measurable transformations.
Chapters 10 and 11 provide the fundamentals of topological and metric spaces.
These chapters can be covered relatively quickly when the students have a
background in topology from other courses. In addition to topics traditionally
found in an introduction to topology, a discussion of weak topologies and
function spaces is included.
Completeness, compactness, and approximation comprise the topics for Chapter 12. Examined therein are the Baire category theorem, contractions of
complete metric spaces, compactness in function and product spaces, and the
Stone-Weierstrass theorem.
Hilbert spaces and the classical Banach spaces are presented in Chapter 13.
Among other things, bases and duality in Hilbert space, completeness and duality of Lp -spaces, and duality in spaces of continuous functions are discussed.
The basic theory of normed and locally convex spaces is introduced in Chapter 14. Topics include the Hahn-Banach theorem, linear operators on Banach
spaces, fundamental properties of locally convex spaces, and the Krein-Milman
theorem.
Chapter 15 provides applications of previous chapters to harmonic analysis.
The elements of Fourier series and transforms and the L2 -theory of the Fourier
transform are examined. In addition, an introduction to wavelets and the
wavelet transform is presented.
Chapter 16 introduces measurable dynamical systems and includes a discussion of ergodic theorems, isomorphisms of measurable dynamical systems, and
entropy.
xviii
Preface
Chapter 17, which is new to this edition, presents outer measure and measurability, Hausdor measure, Hausdor dimension and topological dimension,
and an introduction to fractals.
Figure P.1 on the next page summarizes the preceding discussion and depicts
the interdependence among chapters. In the owchart, the prerequisites for a
given chapter consist of all chapters that have a path leading to that chapter.
Acknowledgments
It is our pleasure to thank the following reviewers of the rst and second editions
of the book. Their comments and suggestions resulted in signicant improvements to the text.
Bruce A. Barnes
University of Oregon
Todd Kemp
University of California, San Diego
Dennis D. Berkey
Boston University
Yon-Seo Kim
University of Chicago
Courtney Coleman
Harvey Mudd College
Michael Klass
University of California, Berkeley
Peter Duren
University of Michigan
Enno Lenzmann
University of Copenhagen
Wilfrid Gangbo
Georgia Institute of Technology
Mara D. Neusel
Texas Tech University
Maria Girardi
University of South Carolina
Duong H. Phong
Columbia University
Sigurdur Helgason
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Bert Schreiber
Wayne State University
Preface
Chapters 1 and 2
(Background/Review)
Set Theory
The Real Number System and Calculus
Chapters 3 and 4
(Lebesgue Theory on the Real Line)
Lebesgue Measure on the Real Line
The Lebesgue Integral on the Real Line
Chapters 5 and 6
(Measure and Integration)
Elements of Measure Theory
Extension to Measures and Product Measure
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 10
Elements of Probability
Differentiation and
Absolute Continuity
Topologies, Metrics,
and Norms
Chapter 16
Chapter 9
Chapter 11
Measurable Dynamical
Systems
Separability and
Compactness
Chapter 12
Complete and Compact
Spaces
Chapter 17
Chapter 13
Hausdorff Measure
and Fractals
Chapter 14
Normed Spaces and
Locally Convex Spaces
Chapter 15
Elements of Harmonic
Analysis
xix