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A useful "abstract nonsense" construction in ergodic theory takes a measure-preserving transformation $T$ of a probability space $(X,\mathcal B,\mu)$ and extends it to an invertible measure-preserving transformation $\bar T$ of a probability space $(\bar X,\bar{\mathcal B},\bar\mu)$.

One description of this is in Omri Sarig's notes (section 1.6.4). In his construction he needs to make the assumption that $T(X)=X$, or the weaker assumption, $T(X)$ is measurable. My question is whether this is automatic for Lebesgue spaces.

Hence my precise question:

If $T$ is a measure-preserving transformation of $[0,1]$ (equipped with Lebesgue measure and the $\sigma$-algebra of Lebesgue measurable sets), is $T([0,1])$ necessarily measurable?

Note: $[0,1]\setminus T([0,1])$ does not contain any measurable sets of positive measure by the Poincaré recurrence theorem, so $T([0,1])$ is certainly of outer measure 1.

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I think the answer is yes.

Let $\mathcal{B}$ be the Borel $\sigma$-algebra on $[0,1]$ and $\mathcal{L}$ the Lebesgue $\sigma$-algebra. Suppose $T$ is $(\mathcal{L}, \mathcal{L})$-measurable and measure preserving. In particular $T$ is $(\mathcal{L}, \mathcal{B})$-measurable (the usual sense of "Lebesgue measurable") and so it is almost everywhere equal to a Borel ($(\mathcal{B}, \mathcal{B})$-measurable) map $S$. That is, there is a measurable set $E$ of measure 1 such that $S = T$ on $E$. Moreover, without loss of generality we may assume $E$ is Borel.

Now since $E$ is a Borel set and $S$ is a Borel map, $S(E) = T(E)$ is analytic and in particular Lebesgue measurable. Moreover, $E \subset T^{-1}(T(E))$, so $T^{-1}(T(E))$ has measure 1. But $T$ was measure preserving, so $T(E)$ has measure 1. Since $T(E) \subset T([0,1])$, we conclude that $T([0,1])$ has measure 1 and in particular is Lebesgue measurable.

The same argument should work if $[0,1]$ is replaced by any Polish space equipped with the completion of a Borel measure.

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  • $\begingroup$ Thanks @Nate. I'm going to have to process some of the measurability facts here. $\endgroup$ Commented May 24, 2014 at 6:22
  • $\begingroup$ @AnthonyQuas: Let me know if I should add more details anywhere. $\endgroup$ Commented May 24, 2014 at 7:11

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