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Real-valued functions of real variable, analytic properties of functions and sequences, limits, continuity, smoothness of these.
11
votes
Accepted
Is the supremum of continuous functions integrable?
No. Let the compact metric space be $[0,1]$ with the standard topology and define
$$
f_\alpha(x) =\alpha\max(1-\alpha \vert x\vert,0)
$$
for $\alpha\in[0,1]$. This satisfies the properties asked for, …
6
votes
Accepted
Does integrating with respect to a finitely additive measure respect addition?
As mentioned in the question, the inequality
$$
\begin{align}\int(f+g)\, d\nu\ge\int f\,d\nu+\int g\,d\nu&&{\rm(1)}\end{align}
$$
follows easily from the definition of the integral $\int f\,d\nu$ (as …
5
votes
Accepted
minimum of two probability densities
If $\mathbb{E}\left[\lVert[ X\rVert^d\right]$ is finite then the integral in the question is necessarily finite. As mentioned, this holds whenever $\pi$ is radially decreasing. However, in the general …
15
votes
Accepted
Real analytic function, injective, non surjective and preserving the rationals ?
The statement in the question is not true. Given any two enumerable and dense sets in open intervals of the reals, there is a (complex) analytic1 function giving a bijection between them. See the foll …
21
votes
0
answers
1k
views
Almost everywhere differentiability for a class of functions on $\mathbb{R}^2$
A while ago, I came across the following problem, which I was not able to resolve one way or the other.
Let $f,g\colon\mathbb{R}^2\to\mathbb{R}$ be continuous functions such that $f(t,x)$ and $g(t …
4
votes
Do convex and decreasing functions preserve the semimartingale property?
I still have no idea what the answer to this question is. However, it is possible to attack the problem in several different ways, and there are various different (but logically equivalent) ways of st …
20
votes
3
answers
2k
views
Do convex and decreasing functions preserve the semimartingale property?
Some time ago I spent a lot of effort trying to show that the semimartingale property is preserved by certain functions. Specifically, that a convex function of a semimartingale and decreasing functio …
15
votes
Accepted
Converse to Banach’s fixed point theorem for ordered fields?
Yes, it is true that $R$ must be the field of real numbers.
As $R$ is an ordered field, it is naturally an extension $\mathbb{Q}\hookrightarrow R$. We can prove the following two properties, which ch …