Vitali covering theorems #
The topological Vitali covering theorem, in its most classical version, states the following.
Consider a family of balls (B (x_i, r_i))_{i ∈ I} in a metric space, with uniformly bounded
radii. Then one can extract a disjoint subfamily indexed by J ⊆ I, such that any B (x_i, r_i)
is included in a ball B (x_j, 5 r_j).
We prove this theorem in Vitali.exists_disjoint_subfamily_covering_enlargement_closedBall.
It is deduced from a more general version, called
Vitali.exists_disjoint_subfamily_covering_enlargement, which applies to any family of sets
together with a size function δ (think "radius" or "diameter").
We deduce the measurable Vitali covering theorem. Assume one is given a family t of closed sets
with nonempty interior, such that each a ∈ t is included in a ball B (x, r) and covers a
definite proportion of the ball B (x, 6 r) for a given measure μ (think of the situation
where μ is a doubling measure and t is a family of balls). Consider a set s at which the
family is fine, i.e., every point of s belongs to arbitrarily small elements of t. Then one
can extract from t a disjoint subfamily that covers almost all s. It is proved in
Vitali.exists_disjoint_covering_ae.
A way to restate this theorem is to say that the set of closed sets a with nonempty interior
covering a fixed proportion 1/C of the ball closedBall x (3 * diam a) forms a Vitali family.
This version is given in Vitali.vitaliFamily.
Vitali covering theorem: given a set t of subsets of a type, one may extract a disjoint
subfamily u such that the τ-enlargement of this family covers all elements of t, where τ > 1
is any fixed number.
When t is a family of balls, the τ-enlargement of ball x r is ball x ((1+2τ) r). In general,
it is expressed in terms of a function δ (think "radius" or "diameter"), positive and bounded on
all elements of t. The condition is that every element a of t should intersect an
element b of u of size larger than that of a up to τ, i.e., δ b ≥ δ a / τ.
We state the lemma slightly more generally, with an indexed family of sets B a for a ∈ t, for
wider applicability.
Vitali covering theorem, closed balls version: given a family t of closed balls, one can
extract a disjoint subfamily u ⊆ t so that all balls in t are covered by the τ-times
dilations of balls in u, for some τ > 3.
The measurable Vitali covering theorem.
Assume one is given a family t of closed sets with nonempty interior, such that each a ∈ t is
included in a ball B (x, r) and covers a definite proportion of the ball B (x, 3 r) for a given
measure μ (think of the situation where μ is a doubling measure and t is a family of balls).
Consider a (possibly non-measurable) set s at which the family is fine, i.e., every point of s
belongs to arbitrarily small elements of t. Then one can extract from t a disjoint subfamily
that covers almost all s.
For more flexibility, we give a statement with a parameterized family of sets.
Assume that around every point there are arbitrarily small scales at which the measure is
doubling. Then the set of closed sets a with nonempty interior contained in closedBall x r and
covering a fixed proportion 1/C of the ball closedBall x (3 * r) forms a Vitali family.
This is essentially a restatement of the measurable Vitali theorem.
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