Sigma algebra: Difference between revisions
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imported>Ragnar Schroder (→Examples: Rephrasing, adding one) |
imported>Michael Hardy (math notation cleanups. I suspect this article will remain an unsatisfactory stub for a long time unless someone among us gets really energetic.) |
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== Examples == | == Examples == | ||
* For any set S, the power set 2<sup>S</sup> itself is a σ algebra. | * For any set ''S'', the power set 2<sup>''S''</sup> itself is a σ algebra. | ||
* The set of all [[Borel set|Borel subsets]] of the [[real number|real line]] is a sigma-algebra. | * The set of all [[Borel set|Borel subsets]] of the [[real number|real line]] is a sigma-algebra. | ||
*Given the set <math>\Omega</math>={Red,Yellow,Green}, the subset F={{}, {Green}, {Red, Yellow}, {Red,Yellow,Green}} of <math>2^\Omega</math> is a σ algebra. | * Given the set <math>\Omega</math> = {Red, Yellow, Green}, the subset ''F'' = {{}, {Green}, {Red, Yellow}, {Red, Yellow, Green}} of <math>2^\Omega</math> is a σ algebra. | ||
== See also == | == See also == |
Revision as of 18:34, 19 December 2007
In mathematics, a sigma algebra is a formal mathematical structure intended among other things to provide a rigid basis for axiomatic probability theory.
Formal definition
Given a set Let be its power set, i.e. set of all subsets of . Let F ⊆ P such that all the following conditions are satisfied:
- If then
- If for then
Examples
- For any set S, the power set 2S itself is a σ algebra.
- The set of all Borel subsets of the real line is a sigma-algebra.
- Given the set = {Red, Yellow, Green}, the subset F = {{}, {Green}, {Red, Yellow}, {Red, Yellow, Green}} of is a σ algebra.