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Let $f$ be a measurable function from $X$ onto $S$ where $(X,\mathcal A)$ is a measurable space and $(S, e)$ is a metric space with Borel $\sigma$-algebra. Let $T$ be a subset of $S$ with discrete relative topology (all subsets of $T$ are open in $T$ ). Show that there is a measurable function $g$ from $X$ onto $T$ . Hint: For $f(x)$ close enough to $t \in T$ , let $g(x) = t$; otherwise, let $g(x) = t_0$ for a fixed $t_0 \in T$ .

I made the following observations:

  1. If $B\subset T$, then $B=U\cap T$ for some open set $U$ in $S$, and so $f^{-1}(B)=f^{-1}(U\cap T)=f^{-1}(U)\cap f^{-1}(T)\in\mathcal{A}$ if $f^{-1}(T)\in\mathcal{A}$. Hence $f^{-1}(T)\in\mathcal{A}$ implies that the preimage of any subset of $T$ under $f$ is measurable.

  2. For $t_0\in T$ fixed, we can let $g(x)= f(x)$ if $x\in f^{-1}(T)$ and $g(x)=t_0$ otherwise. Then $g$ is onto $T$, and for $t\in T$ we have $g^{-1}(\{t\})=f^{-1}(\{t\})$ or $f^{-1}(\{t\})\cup (f^{-1}(T))^c$. It follows that $g^{-1}(\{t\})$ is measurable for all $t\in T$, and if $T$ is countable this is sufficient for the measurability of $g$.

But how to deal with the case where $T$ is uncountable?

Any help on this is very appreciated.

Alphie
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  • @CharlesMcCharles You are right I made a mistake. So in fact $f^{-1}(T)$ need not be measurable? – Alphie Apr 30 '21 at 21:03
  • I'm having a hard time constructing a specific example where it's not measurable. On the other hand, I don't see why it would be measurable. Tricky!! – John Hopfensperger Apr 30 '21 at 21:07