In the mathematical field of analysis, the Brezis–Lieb lemma is a basic result in measure theory. It is named for Haïm Brézis and Elliott Lieb, who discovered it in 1983. The lemma can be viewed as an improvement, in certain settings, of Fatou's lemma to an equality. As such, it has been useful for the study of many variational problems.
Let be a measure space and let be a sequence of measurable complex-valued functions on which converge almost everywhere to a function . The limiting function is automatically measurable. The Brezis–Lieb lemma asserts that if is a positive number, then
\limn\toinfty
p|d\mu=0, | |
\int | |
n| |
pd\mu=\lim | |
\int | |
n\toinfty |
\left(\intX|f
pd\mu-\int | |
X|f-f |
pd\mu\right), | |
n| |
The essence of the proof is in the inequalities
\begin{align} Wn\equiv
p-|f| | |
||f | |
n| |
p|+|f| | |
n| |
p. \end{align} | |
\varepsilon|f| |
Wn\leqmax(0,Wn-\varepsilon|f-f
p, | |
n| |
\limsupn\toinfty\intXWnd\mu\leq\varepsilon\supn\intX
pd\mu. | |
|f-f | |
n| |
FootnotesSources