Sigma-ring

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In mathematics, a nonempty collection of sets \mathcal{R} is called a σ-ring (pronounced sigma-ring) if it is closed under countable union and relative complementation:

  1. \bigcup_{n=1}^{\infty} A_{n} \in \mathcal{R} if A_{n} \in \mathcal{R} for all n \in \mathbb{N}
  2. A - B \in \mathcal{R} if A, B \in \mathcal{R}

If the first property is weakened to closure under finite union (i.e., A \cup B \in \mathcal{R} whenever A, B \in \mathcal{R}) but not countable union, then \mathcal{R} is a ring but not a σ-ring.

σ-rings can be used instead of σ-fields in the development of measure and integration theory, if one does not wish to require that the universal set be measurable. Every σ-field is also a σ-ring, but a σ-ring need not be a σ-field.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  • Walter Rudin, 1976. Principles of Mathematical Analysis, 3rd. ed. McGraw-Hill. Final chapter uses σ-rings in development of Lebesgue theory.
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