Home
Archaeology
Astronomy
Biology
Books
Business
Chemistry
Coins
Computers
Conservation
Cooking
Earth Science
Farming
Economics
Finance
Games
Geography
Health Science
History by Date
Hobbies
Law
Mathematics
Medicine
Military Technology
Movies
Music
People
Pharmacology
Philosophy
Physics
Psychology
Religion
Science History
Technology
Sports
Television
Video
Visual Art
Privacy
Contact Us



Haar measure

In mathematical analysis, the Haar measure is a way to assign an "invariant volume" to subsets of locally compact topological groups and subsequently define an integral for functions on those groups.

This measure was introduced by Alfréd Haar, a Hungarian mathematician about 1932.

If G is a locally compact topological group, we can consider the σ-algebra X generated by all compact subsets of G. If a is an element of G and S is a set in X, then the set aS = {as : s in S} (where the multiplication is the group operation in G) is also in X. A measure μ on X is called left-translation-invariant if μ(aS) = μ(S) for all a and S.

It turns out that there is, up to a multiplicative constant, only one left-translation-invariant measure on X which is finite on all compact sets. This is the Haar measure on G. (There is also an essentially unique right-translation-invariant measure on X, but the two measures need not coincide.) Using the general Lebesgue integration approach, one can then define an integral for all measurable functions f : G -> R (or C), called the Haar integral. This is the beginning of harmonic analysis.

The Haar measure on the topological group (R, +) which takes the value 1 on the interval [0,1] is equal to the Borel measure. This can be generalized for (Rn, +). If G is the group of positive real numbers with multiplication as operation, then the Haar measure μ(S) is given by ∫S 1/x dx for any Borel set S.


Copyright 2004. All rights reserved.