In
mathematics, in the area of classical
potential theory
In mathematics and mathematical physics, potential theory is the study of harmonic functions.
The term "potential theory" was coined in 19th-century physics when it was realized that two fundamental forces of nature known at the time, namely gra ...
, polar sets are the "negligible sets", similar to the way in which sets of measure zero are the
negligible set
In mathematics, a negligible set is a set that is small enough that it can be ignored for some purpose.
As common examples, finite sets can be ignored when studying the limit of a sequence, and null sets can be ignored when studying the integ ...
s in
measure theory.
Definition
A set
in
(where
) is a polar set if there is a non-constant
superharmonic function
:
on
such that
:
Note that there are other (equivalent) ways in which polar sets may be defined, such as by replacing "subharmonic" by "superharmonic", and
by
in the definition above.
Properties
The most important properties of polar sets are:
*A singleton set in
is polar.
*A countable set in
is polar.
*The union of a countable collection of polar sets is polar.
*A polar set has Lebesgue measure zero in
Nearly everywhere
A property holds nearly everywhere in a set ''S'' if it holds on ''S''−''E'' where ''E'' is a Borel polar set. If ''P'' holds nearly everywhere then it holds
almost everywhere
In measure theory (a branch of mathematical analysis), a property holds almost everywhere if, in a technical sense, the set for which the property holds takes up nearly all possibilities. The notion of "almost everywhere" is a companion notion t ...
.
[Ransford (1995) p.56]
See also
*
Pluripolar set In mathematics, in the area of potential theory, a pluripolar set is the analog of a polar set for plurisubharmonic functions.
Definition
Let G \subset ^n and let f \colon G \to \cup \ be a plurisubharmonic function which is not identically -\inf ...
References
*
*
*
External links
* {{planetmath reference, urlname=PolarSet, title=Polar set
Subharmonic functions