August 11th, 2009, 2:36 pm
yes. sorry. I meant the left hand side. I was thinking about the following counter-example:Take some omega such that U_i <= 0.5 if i \in V, and U_i > 0.5 if i \nin V, where V is the Vitali set. Also, fix f(x) = 0, if x <= 0.5 and f(x) = 1, if x > 0.5then, clearly f(U_i(w)) is not Lebesgue measurable.I guess (but I cant prove it) that the set of such omegas has probability > 0 (i think it could be probably 1)...that makes your integral some non well defined object since it is a random variable and as such, it has to be defined for every omega...When you talk about Riemann sums, keep in mind that f(U_i) is a random variable, and is a function on [0,1] for each fixed omega. but U_i is not continuous with probability 1, so you can't approximate its integral by Riemann sums, and therefore I don't think that your argument with the strong law holds...