I’ve been looking for a quantitative notion of the Borel-Cantelli lemma along the following lines:
Let $(X,\Omega,p)$ be a probability space, and let $(A_n)_n\subseteq \Omega$ be a sequence of measurable sets s.t $p(A_n)\geq 1-\delta$ for all $n$ (for some small $\delta>0$).
Then of course, the Borel-Cantelli lemma tells us that $p(\limsup A_n)>0$, and in fact a trivial observation from the proof of the lemma shows $p(\limsup A_n)\geq 1-\delta$.
However, I am interested in something further, relating to the lower density of sequences of indices to which elements belong: is there $\alpha>0$ s.t $$p\left(\left\{x\in X: \exists n_k\uparrow \infty\text{ with }\underline{d}((n_k)_k)\geq 1-\alpha\text{ s.t }x\in A_{n_k},\forall k\geq 0\right\}\right)\geq 1-\alpha?$$ where $\underline{d}(\cdot)$ denotes the lower-density of a sequence. In particular, can $\alpha>0$ be made small when $\delta>0$ is small?
Intuitively it seems to make sense, but so far no success in proving, and also searching online yielded nothing. Any interesting counter examples are also welcome.
Thanks.