I have recently come across the book The Kurzweil-Henstock Integral and its Differentials by Solomon Leader, in which, if I understand correctly, the HK integration process is modified in a way that makes it also work for dimensions higher than 1 (there's a proof of Green's theorem at the end). It has always been my impression that HK-integration doesn't extend to n dimensions, but truth be told, I don't actually know why.
So my question(s) is (are):
- In what sense can the Henstock-Kurzweil integral not be extended to more than one dimension?
- Leader's construction via summants below seems very reminiscent of Jenny Harrison's work on chainlets. Are the two related?
- Does the relationship to measures from the one-dimensional case go both ways, i.e. every measure is a differential? Would this relationship be preserved in higher dimensions?
Below I've summarized the key features of Leader's construction.
A cell is a closed interval [a,b] in $[-\infty, \infty]$. A figure is a finite union of cells. A tagged cell in a figure K is a pair (I,t) where I is an interval contained in K, and t is an endpoint of I (according to Leader, the restriction of tags to be endpoints is key).
A gauge is a function $\delta:[-\infty,\infty]\to (0,\infty)$. Every gauge associated to every point t a neighborhood '$N_\delta(t)$ which is $(t-\delta(t),t+\delta(t))$ for finite t, $[-\infty,-\frac1{\delta(-\infty)}]$ and $[\frac1{\delta(-\infty)},\infty]$ for the infinite points. This ensures that $N_\alpha(t) \subset N_\beta(t)$ if $\alpha(t)\leq\beta(t)$, and then we can define division of a figure K into tagged cells to be $\delta$-fine if for each tagged cell $(I,t)$ we have $I\subset N_\delta(t)$.
Then where I understand Leader's theory to take a departure from the normal development, he defines a summant S to be a function on tagged cells, and then he constructs $\int_K S$ of a summant S over a figure K as the directed limit of $\sum_{(I,t)\in\mathcal{K}} S(I,t)$ over gauges $\delta$, where $\mathcal{K}$ are $\delta$-fine divisions of K (he actually defines a limit supremum and a limit infimum and works with those).
Some summants are for example $\Delta([a,b])=b-a$ and $|\Delta|([a,b]=|b-a|$. Any summant S can be multiplied by a function by way of (fS)(I,t)=f(t)S(I,t), and any function can be canonically extended to a summant f\Delta.
Where his theory really gets interesting is that he defines differentials as equivalence classes of summants under the equivalence relation S~T if $\int_K|S-T|=0$. From there he defines the differential of any function g by $dg=[g\Delta], where [S] is the equivalence class of the summant S.
From this he calls a differential integrable if its representative summants S are integrable, and show that every integrable summant is of the form df where f is a function. Then absolutely integrable summants (ones such that |df| is integrable) give rise to measures. For example, the differential dx, where x is the identity function, corresponds to standard Lebesgue measure.
A final point of interest is that the fundamental theorem of calculus can be formulated as $f\Delta=f'df$ where f' is the usual derivative of f (which I actually think is a great way to motivate the definition of pointwise derivative in the first place).
On to n-dimensional theory, though. An n-cell [a,b] consists of the parallelopiped with opposite vertices (a,a,a,...,a) and (b,b,b,b,...,b). A tagged n-cell (I,t) has tag one of the vertices, it is $\delta$-fine if it's diameter is less than $\delta(t)$. The $\Delta^(n)g$ is given by the alternating sum $\sum_{t\in V_I} (-1)^{\mathcal{N}_I(v)}g(t)$, where VI are the vertices of I, and NI(v) are the number of coordinates of v that are the same as those of the tag t.
Allegedly (Solomon doesn't give the details in his book), integration goes through, though some results regarding fundamental theorem and such allegedly do not. I am unclear on what happens to the relationship with measures.