Analysis Problem of the Day 55

Today’s problem appeared as Problem 5 on the UCLA Spring 2022 Analysis Qual:

Problem 5. Let \mu be a Borel measure on \mathbb{R}^2 such that for fixed r>0, \mu(B(x,r)) is independent of x.

a) Prove that \mu(B(x,r)) \leq cr^2 for some c>0 for 0 < r \leq 1.

b) Prove that \mu is a constant multiple of the Lebesgue measure.


Solution: a) We write \mu(B(x,r))=B(r) and note that B is decreasing as r \to 0. We are asked to show that the measure scales quadratically. This makes intuitive sense since the “area” of a ball in \mathbb{R}^2 scales quadratically with radius. Rigorously, note that a circle of radius r contains a square of length \sqrt{2} r, each side of which contains at least \lfloor\frac{\sqrt{2}r}{\frac{r}{2^n}}\rfloor = \lfloor 2^n \sqrt{2}\rfloor \geq 2^n subdivisions of side length \frac{r}{2^n}, each of which corresponds to a square that can fit a circle of radius \frac{r}{2^{n+1}}. By the additivity of measures, it follows that B(r) \geq 2^{2n} B(\frac{r}{2^{n+1}}). We let c=\sup_{r \in [1,2]} B(r), and note that for r \in [2^{-(n+1)},2^{-n}], the above inequality implies B(r) \leq 2^{-2n} c \leq c r^2. Thus, B(r) \leq cr^2 for all 0<r \leq 1.

b) For a Borel measurable set A and any Borel measure \mu on \mathbb{R}^2, \mu(A) is the infimum of the measures of countable unions of open balls containing A. Let m be the Lebesgue measure on \mathbb{R}^2. Since \mu \leq C m on balls, it follows that \mu(A) \leq C m(A) for all measurable A with m(A)<1. This implies that \mu \ll m, so by Radon-Nikodym, there exists a measurable function f s.t. \int_A f dm = \mu(A) for all measurable A. By the Lebesgue differentiation theorem, it follows that f is a.e. the limit of its averages over shrinking balls. But \frac{1}{m(B(x,r))}\int_{B(x,r)} f dm = \frac{\mu(B(x,r))}{m(B(x,r))}, which is constant for fixed 0 < r \leq 1 for all x. It follows that f is a.e. the limit of the same sequence, i.e. f is constant a.e. It immediately follows that \mu is a constant multiple of the Lebesgue measure.

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