Revision as of 10:06, 2 July 2008 by Luo7 (Talk)

$ \sup\limits_n\int_{\{|f_n|>M\}}|f_n|\leq\sup\limits_n\int_{(0,1)}|f_n-f|+\sup\limits_n\int_{\{|f_n|>M\}}|f| $

$ Since \int_{(0,1)}|f_n-f|\to0(n\to\infty), \sup\limits_n\int_{(0,1)}|f_n-f|=0 $

Therefore, to show $ \sup\limits_n\int_{\{|f_n|>M\}}|f_n|\to0(M\to\infty), $it suffices to show that $ \sup\limits_n\int_{\{|f_n|>M\}}|f|\to0(M\to\infty) $

Actually,

$ \int_{\{f_n>M\}}|f|\leq\int_{\{|f_n|>M & |f|<M-\delta\}}|f|+\int_{\{|f|>M-\delta\}}|f| $

Alumni Liaison

Abstract algebra continues the conceptual developments of linear algebra, on an even grander scale.

Dr. Paul Garrett