Uniform limits of preponderantly continuous functions (Q1952426): Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 11:08, 6 July 2024

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Uniform limits of preponderantly continuous functions
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    Uniform limits of preponderantly continuous functions (English)
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    30 May 2013
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    Let \(\lambda\) be the Lebesgue measure on the real line. A real number \(x_0\) is a point of preponderant density in Denjoy's sense of a measurable set \(E \subseteq R\) if \(\liminf_{\lambda(J) \to 0, x_0 \in J}\frac{\lambda(J\cap E)}{\lambda(J)} > \frac 12\). A function \(f:I \to R\) is preponderantly continuous at \(x_0 \in I\) in Denjoy's sense if there is a measurable set \(E\) containing \(x_0\) such that the restriction of \(f\) to \(E\) is continuous at \(x_0\) and \(x_0\) is a point of preponderant density of \(E\). A point \(x_0\) is a point of preponderant density in O'Malley's sense of \(E\) if there is a closed neighborhood of \(x_0\) such that each of its closed subintervals \(J\) containing \(x_0\) fulfills the inequality \(\frac{\lambda(E\cap J)}{\lambda(J)} > \frac 12\). Preponderant continuity in O'Malley's sense is defined analogously. It is shown that while preponderant continuity in O'Malley's sense is preserved under uniform limit, it is not the case for the Denjoy preponderantly continuous functions. The metric and topological properties of these families of functions are studied.
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    preponderant continuity
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    path continuity
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    approximate continuity
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    uniform limit
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    Denjoy density
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    O'Malley density
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