1
$\begingroup$

$A\subset \Bbb{R}$ is meager if $A$ can be expressed as a countable union of nowhere dense sets.

Let $f:[a, b]\to \Bbb{R}$ is absolutely continuous, i.e., for every $\epsilon>0$, there exists $\delta>0 $ such that whenever a finite sequence of pairwise disjoint sub-intervals $(a_n, b_n) $ of $[a, b]$ satisfies $\sum_{n} b_n-a_n<\delta$, then $\sum_{n} |f(b_n) -f(a_n)| <\epsilon$.

Given an absolutely continuous $f$, is it always true that $f(M) $ is meager for every meager set $M$?

The Cantor function is an example of a function that maps the Cantor set (meager) to all of $[0, 1]$ (non meager). But I found that the Cantor function is not absolutely continuous.

One more question, if a function maps meager sets to meager sets, does it satisfy the Lusin-N property? And what about the converse?

I asked this question on MSE. https://math.stackexchange.com/q/4463264/977780

This is my first question on MO.

$\endgroup$
1
  • 1
    $\begingroup$ But the Cantor function will become absolutely continuous if you use a positive measure Cantor set. $\endgroup$ Jun 4, 2022 at 16:06

1 Answer 1

5
$\begingroup$

Let $K$ be a nowhere dense closed subset of $[0,1]$ of positive Lebesgue measure $\delta>0$. Such a set $K$ can be obtained using the standard technique for constructing a nowhere dense closed set of positive measure.

Define a function $f:\mathbb{R}\rightarrow\mathbb{R}$ by letting $f(x)=m(K\cap(-\infty,x))$ where $m$ denotes the Lebesgue measure. Then $f(0)=0,f(1)=\delta$. Then the function $f$ satisfies $|f(y)-f(x)|\leq|y-x|$. Therefore, $f$ is Lipschitz continuous and therefore absolutely continuous as well.

I now claim that $f[K]=[0,\delta]$. Suppose therefore that $0\leq y\leq\delta$. Then let $x_0$ be the least element with $f(x_0)=\delta$. Therefore, whenever $x<x_0$, we have $f(x)<\delta$. This implies that $m((x,x_0)\cap K)>0$ which means that $x_0$ is a limit point of $K$. Since $K$ is a closed set, we have $x_0\in K$ as well. Therefore, $y=f(x_0)\in K$. We conclude that $f[K]=[0,\delta]$ which has positive measure.

Now, every continuous bijection will automatically map meager sets to meager sets. On the other hand, suppose $f:[0,1]\rightarrow[0,1]$ is the Cantor function, and $I:[0,1]\rightarrow[0,1]$ is the identity function, then $f+I:[0,1]\rightarrow[0,2]$ will be a continuous bijection, so $f+I$ maps meager sets to meager sets. The function $f+I$ is clearly not absolutely continuous since $f$ is not absolutely continuous, so does not satisfy the Luzin N property.

$\endgroup$
1

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.