In the mathematical field of measure theory, an outer measure or exterior measure is a function defined on all subsets of a given set with values in the extended real numbers satisfying some additional technical conditions. The theory of outer measures was first introduced by Constantin Carathéodory to provide an abstract basis for the theory of measurable sets and countably additive measures. Carathéodory's work on outer measures found many applications in measure-theoretic set theory (outer measures are for example used in the proof of the fundamental Carathéodory's extension theorem), and was used in an essential way by Hausdorff to define a dimension-like metric invariant now called Hausdorff dimension. Outer measures are commonly used in the field of geometric measure theory.
Measures are generalizations of length, area and volume, but are useful for much more abstract and irregular sets than intervals in or balls in . One might expect to define a generalized measuring function on that fulfills the following requirements:
It turns out that these requirements are incompatible conditions; see non-measurable set. The purpose of constructing an outer measure on all subsets of is to pick out a class of subsets (to be called measurable) in such a way as to satisfy the countable additivity property.
Given a set let denote the collection of all subsets of including the empty set An outer measure on is a set function
such that
Note that there is no subtlety about infinite summation in this definition. Since the summands are all assumed to be nonnegative, the sequence of partial sums could only diverge by increasing without bound. So the infinite sum appearing in the definition will always be a well-defined element of If, instead, an outer measure were allowed to take negative values, its definition would have to be modified to take into account the possibility of non-convergent infinite sums.
An alternative and equivalent definition. Some textbooks, such as Halmos (1950) and Folland (1999), instead define an outer measure on to be a function such that
Let be a set with an outer measure One says that a subset of is -measurable (sometimes called Carathéodory-measurable relative to , after the mathematician Carathéodory) if and only if
for every subset of
Informally, this says that a -measurable subset is one which may be used as a building block, breaking any other subset apart into pieces (namely, the piece which is inside of the measurable set together with the piece which is outside of the measurable set). In terms of the motivation for measure theory, one would expect that area, for example, should be an outer measure on the plane. One might then expect that every subset of the plane would be deemed "measurable," following the expected principle that
whenever and are disjoint subsets of the plane. However, the formal logical development of the theory shows that the situation is more complicated. A formal implication of the axiom of choice is that for any definition of area as an outer measure which includes as a special case the standard formula for the area of a rectangle, there must be subsets of the plane which fail to be measurable. In particular, the above "expected principle" is false, provided that one accepts the axiom of choice.
It is straightforward to use the above definition of -measurability to see that
The following condition is known as the "countable additivity of on measurable subsets."
A similar proof shows that:
The properties given here can be summarized by the following terminology:
One thus has a measure space structure on arising naturally from the specification of an outer measure on This measure space has the additional property of completeness, which is contained in the following statement:
This is easy to prove by using the second property in the "alternative definition" of outer measure.
Let be an outer measure on the set .
Given another set and a map define by
One can verify directly from the definitions that is an outer measure on .
Let be a subset of . Define by
One can check directly from the definitions that is another outer measure on .
If a subset of is -measurable, then it is also -measurable for any subset of .
Given a map and a subset of , if is -measurable then is -measurable. More generally, is -measurable if and only if is -measurable for every subset of .
Given a set , an outer measure on is said to be regular if any subset can be approximated 'from the outside' by -measurable sets. Formally, this is requiring either of the following equivalent conditions:
It is automatic that the second condition implies the first; the first implies the second by taking the countable intersection of with
Given an outer measure on a set , define by
Then is a regular outer measure on which assigns the same measure as to all -measurable subsets of . Every -measurable subset is also -measurable, and every -measurable subset of finite -measure is also -measurable.
So the measure space associated to may have a larger ÃÂ-algebra than the measure space associated to . The restrictions of and to the smaller ÃÂ-algebra are identical. The elements of the larger ÃÂ-algebra which are not contained in the smaller ÃÂ-algebra have infinite -measure and finite -measure.
From this perspective, may be regarded as an extension of .
Suppose is a metric space and an outer measure on . If has the property that
whenever
then is called a metric outer measure.
Theorem. If is a metric outer measure on , then every Borel subset of is -measurable. (The Borel sets of are the elements of the smallest -algebra generated by the open sets.)
There are several procedures for constructing outer measures on a set. The classic Munroe reference below describes two particularly useful ones which are referred to as Method I and Method II.
Let be a set, a family of subsets of which contains the empty set and a non-negative extended real valued function on which vanishes on the empty set.
Theorem. Suppose the family and the function are as above and define
That is, the infimum extends over all sequences of elements of which cover , with the convention that the infimum is infinite if no such sequence exists. Then is an outer measure on .
The second technique is more suitable for constructing outer measures on metric spaces, since it yields metric outer measures. Suppose is a metric space. As above is a family of subsets of which contains the empty set and a non-negative extended real valued function on which vanishes on the empty set. For each , let
and
Obviously, when since the infimum is taken over a smaller class as decreases. Thus
exists (possibly infinite).
Theorem. is a metric outer measure on .
This is the construction used in the definition of Hausdorff measures for a metric space.