Integration is one of the two cornerstones of analysis. Since the fundamental work of Lebesgue, integration has been interpreted in terms of measure theory. This introductory text starts with the historical development of the notion of the integral and a review of the Riemann integral. From here, the reader is naturally led to the consideration of the Lebesgue integral, where abstract integration is developed via measure theory. The important basic topics are all covered: the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus, Fubini's Theorem, Lp spaces, the Radon-Nikodym Theorem, change of variables formulas, and so on.
The book is written in an informal style to make the subject matter easily accessible. Concepts are developed with the help of motivating examples, probing questions, and many exercises. It would be suitable as a textbook for an introductory course on the topic or for self-study.
For this edition, more exercises and four appendices have been added.
The AMS maintains exclusive distribution rights for this edition in North America and nonexclusive distribution rights worldwide, excluding India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan, Sikkim, and Sri Lanka.
Readership: Graduate students and research mathematicians interested in mathematical analysis.
Author(s): Inder K. Rana
Series: Graduate Studies in Mathematics 45
Edition: 2
Publisher: Amer Mathematical Society
Year: 2002
Language: English
Pages: xxii+424
Prologue: The length function
Riemann integration
Recipes for extending the Riemann integral
General extension theory
The Lebesgue measure on R and its properties
Integration
Fundamental theorem of calculus for the Lebesgue integral
Measure and integration on product spaces
Modes of convergence and Lp-spaces
The Radon-Nikodym theorem and its applications
Signed measures and complex measures
Extended real numbers
Axiom of choice
Continuum hypotheses
Urysohn's lemma
Singular value decomposition of a matrix
Functions of bounded variation
Differentiable transformations
References
Index
Index of notations