A Measure Theoretic Paradox from a continuous colouring rule
Abstract
Given a probability space $(X, {\cal B}, m)$, measure preserving transformations $g_1, \dots , g_k$ of $X$, and a colour set $C$, a colouring rule is a way to colour the space with $C$ such that the colours allowed for apoint $x$ are determined by that point's location and the colours of the finitely $g_1 (x), \dots , g_k(x)$ with $g_i(x) \not= x$ for all $i$ and almost all $x$. We represent a colouring rule as a correspondence $F$ defined on $X\times C^k$ with values in $C$. A function $f: X\rightarrow C$ satisfies the rule at $x$ if $f(x) \in F( x, f(g_1 x), \dots , f(g_k x))$. A colouring rule is paradoxical if it can be satisfied in some way almost everywhere with respect to $m$, but not in {\bf any} way that is measurable with respect to a finitely additive measure that extends the probability measure $m$ defined on ${\cal B}$ and for which the finitely many transformations $g_1, \dots , g_k$ remain measure preserving. Can a colouring rule be paradoxical if both $X$ and the colour set $C$ are convex and compact sets and the colouring rule says if $c: X\rightarrow C$ is the colouring function then the colour $c(x)$ must lie ($m$ a.e.) in $F(x, c(g_1(x) ), \dots , c(g_k(x)))$ for a non-empty upper-semi-continuous convex-valued correspondence $F$ defined on $X\times C^k$? The answer is yes, and we present such an example. We show that this result is robust, including that any colouring that approximates the correspondence by $\epsilon$ for small enough positive $\epsilon$ also cannot be measurable in the same finitely additive way. Because non-empty upper-semi-continuous convex-valued correspondences on Euclidean space can be approximated by continuous functions, there are paradoxical colouring rules that are defined by continuous functions.
- Publication:
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arXiv e-prints
- Pub Date:
- March 2022
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:2203.11158
- Bibcode:
- 2022arXiv220311158S
- Keywords:
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- Mathematics - Combinatorics;
- 28D05