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In [[mathematics]], two positive (or [[signed measure|signed]] or [[complex measure|complex]]) measures ''&mu;'' and ''&nu;'' defined on a [[measurable space]] (&Omega;, &Sigma;) are called '''singular''' if there exist two disjoint sets ''A'' and ''B'' in  &Sigma; whose [[set union|union]] is &Omega; such that ''&mu;'' is zero on all measurable subsets of ''B'' while ''&nu;'' is zero on all measurable subsets of ''A''. This is denoted by  <math>\mu \perp \nu.</math>
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A refined form of [[Lebesgue's decomposition theorem]] decomposes a singular measure into a singular continuous measure and a [[discrete measure]]. See below for examples.
 
==Examples on '''R'''<sup>''n''</sup>==
As a particular case, a measure defined on the [[Euclidean space]] '''R'''<sup>''n''</sup> is called ''singular'', if it is singular in respect to the [[Lebesgue measure]] on this space. For example, the [[Dirac delta function]] is a singular measure.
 
'''Example.''' A [[discrete measure]].
 
The [[Heaviside step function]] on the [[real line]],
 
: <math>H(x) \ \stackrel{\mathrm{def}}{=} \begin{cases} 0, & x < 0; \\ 1, & x \geq 0; \end{cases}</math>
 
has the [[Dirac delta function|Dirac delta distribution]] <math>\delta_0</math> as its distributional derivative. This is a measure on the real line, a "point mass" at 0. However, the [[Dirac measure]] <math>\delta_0</math> is not absolutely continuous with respect to Lebesgue measure <math>\lambda</math>, nor is <math>\lambda</math> absolutely continuous with respect to <math>\delta_0</math>: <math>\lambda ( \{ 0 \} ) = 0</math> but <math>\delta_0 ( \{ 0 \} ) = 1</math>; if <math>U</math> is any [[open set]] not containing 0, then <math>\lambda (U) > 0</math> but <math>\delta_0 (U) = 0</math>.
 
'''Example.''' A singular continuous measure.
 
The [[Cantor distribution]] has a [[cumulative distribution function]] that is continuous but not [[absolutely continuous]], and indeed its absolutely continuous part is zero: it is singular continuous.
 
==See also==
* [[Lebesgue's decomposition theorem]]
* [[Absolutely continuous]]
* [[Singular distribution]]
 
==References==
* Eric W Weisstein, ''CRC Concise Encyclopedia of Mathematics'', CRC Press, 2002. ISBN 1-58488-347-2.
* J Taylor, ''An Introduction to Measure and Probability'', Springer, 1996. ISBN 0-387-94830-9.
 
{{PlanetMath attribution|id=4002|title=singular measure}}
 
[[Category:Integral calculus]]
[[Category:Measures (measure theory)]]

Latest revision as of 13:01, 29 December 2014

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