In mathematics, specifically in measure theory, the trivial measure on any measurable space (X, ã) is the measure ü which assigns zero measure to every measurable set: ü(A) = 0 for all A in ã.
Properties of the trivial measure
Let ü denote the trivial measure on some measurable space (X, ã).
Suppose that X is a topological space and that ã is the Borel ÃÂ-algebra on X.
- ü trivially satisfies the condition to be a regular measure.
- ü is never a strictly positive measure, regardless of (X, ã), since every measurable set has zero measure.
- Since ü(X) = 0, ü is always a finite measure, and hence a locally finite measure.
- If X is a Hausdorff topological space with its Borel ÃÂ-algebra, then ü trivially satisfies the condition to be a tight measure. Hence, ü is also a Radon measure. In fact, it is the vertex of the pointed cone of all non-negative Radon measures on X.
- If X is an infinite-dimensional Banach space with its Borel ÃÂ-algebra, then ü is the only measure on (X, ã) that is locally finite and invariant under all translations of X. See the article There is no infinite-dimensional Lebesgue measure.
- If X is n-dimensional Euclidean space R<sup>n</sup> with its usual ÃÂ-algebra and n-dimensional Lebesgue measure û<sup>n</sup>, ü is a singular measure with respect to û<sup>n</sup>: simply decompose R<sup>n</sup> as A = R<sup>n</sup> \ {0} and B = {0} and observe that ü(A) = û<sup>n</sup>(B) = 0.
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