A referee of a submitted paper requested details on the statement that $\int_0^a e^{-tx^2}\,dx$ is log-convex in real $t$, for each $a>0$. While there are a number of ways to prove this statement, I think the simplest way to address the mentioned request would be just to refer to the following well-known, folklor-ish, and easily proved fact: 

>Let $(X,\Sigma,\mu)$ be a measure space. If the function $g\colon \mathbb R\times X\to\mathbb R$ is measurable and the function $t\mapsto g(t,x)$ is log-convex for each $x\in X$, then the "mixture" function $t\mapsto\int_X g(t,x)\mu(dx)$ is log-convex as well. 

However, I cannot find a reference to this fact, even when $X=\mathbb R$ and $\mu$ is the Lebesgue measure. Can you help me with this? 

I only need references, not proofs. I already have references to the fact that the sum of log-convex functions is log-convex, from which the highlighted result easily follows, and actually a proof of the highlighted  result is quite similar to one of the log-convexity of the sum of log-convex functions -- say, by using  Hölder's inequality. However, I'd like to have a reference to the highlighted result just as stated, at least for the mentioned case when $X=\mathbb R$ and $\mu$ is the Lebesgue measure (of course, the referenced paper/book should contain a proof). 

(I have posted this question on [Mathematics SE][1], but received no answers or comments.)


  [1]: https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/2563457/mixtures-of-log-convex-functions-are-log-convex-a-reference