Below we use Bochner measurability and Bochner integral. Let
- $(X, \mathcal A, \mu)$ and $(Y, \mathcal B, \nu)$ be complete $\sigma$-finite measure spaces,
- $(E, | \cdot |)$ a Banach space,
- $S (X)$ the space of $\mu$-simple functions from $X$ to $E$,
- $L^0 (X)$ the space of $\mu$-measurable functions from $X$ to $E$,
- $L^1 (X)$ the space of $\mu$-integrable functions from $X$ to $E$,
- $\mathcal C :=\mathcal A \otimes \mathcal B$ the product $\sigma$-algebra of $\mathcal A$ and $\mathcal B$,
- $\lambda := \mu \otimes \nu$ the product measure of $\mu$ and $\nu$.
Theorem 4.4.1 at page 98 of Martin Väth's monograph Ideal Spaces suggests that
Theorem Let $\mu, \nu$ be finite measures, i.e., $\mu(X) + \nu (Y)< \infty$. Let $f_n:X \times Y \to E$ be $\lambda$-simple for all $n \in \mathbb N$. Assume that for $\mu$-a.e. $x \in X$, the sequence $(f_n(x, \cdot))_n$ is a Cauchy sequence in $L^1 (Y)$. Then $f_n$ is a Cauchy sequence in $L^1 (X \times Y)$.
The author's proof is in the context of pre-ideal spaces, which is unfamiliar to me. Here I work with the usual Bochner spaces.
Could you elaborate on how to prove above Theorem?
Below I add relevant paragraph in the book.