Limits Along Parallel Lines and the Classical Fine Topology |
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Authors: | Essen, Matts R. Gardiner, Stephen J. |
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Affiliation: | Department of Mathematics, Uppsala University Box 480, S-751 06 Uppsala, Sweden Department of Mathematics, University College Dublin Dublin 4, Ireland |
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Abstract: | The fine topology on Rn (n2) is the coarsest topology for whichall superharmonic functions on Rn are continuous. We refer toDoob [11, 1.XI] for its basic properties and its relationshipto the notion of thinness. This paper presents several theoremsrelating the fine topology to limits of functions along parallellines. (Results of this nature for the minimal fine topologyhave been given by Doob see [10, Theorem 3.1] or [11,1.XII.23] and the second author [15].) In particular,we will establish improvements and generalizations of resultsof Lusin and Privalov [18], Evans [12], Rudin [20], Bagemihland Seidel [6], Schneider [21], Berman [7], and Armitage andNelson [4], and will also solve a problem posed by the latterauthors. An early version of our first result is due to Evans [12, p.234], who proved that, if u is a superharmonic function on R3,then there is a set ER2x{0}, of two-dimensional measure 0, suchthat u(x, y,·) is continuous on R whenever (x, y, 0)E.We denote a typical point of Rn by X=(X' x), where X'Rn1and xR. Let :RnRn1x{0} denote the projection map givenby (X', x) = (X', 0). For any function f:Rn[, +] andpoint X we define the vertical and fine cluster sets of f atX respectively by CV(f;X)={l[, +]: there is a sequence (tm) of numbersin R{x} such that tmx and f(X', tm)l}| and CF(f;X)={l[, +]: for each neighbourhood N of l in [,+], the set f1(N) is non-thin at X}. Sets which are open in the fine topology will be called finelyopen, and functions which are continuous with respect to thefine topology will be called finely continuous. Corollary 1(ii)below is an improvement of Evans' result. |
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