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While skipping through the class notes I noticed one exercice that I couldn't solve:

Suppose we have $\mu$ - probability distribution in $\mathbb{R}$.

Recalling that $\mu_k \rightarrow \mu$ iff $\int_{\mathbb{R}} f(x)\mu_k(dx) \rightarrow \int_{\mathbb{R}} f(x) \mu(dx)$, $\forall f \in C(\mathbb{R})$, $f$ bounded $k\rightarrow \infty$. We have to show:

  1. $\exists \mu_k$ - series of continuous distributions that $\mu_k \rightarrow \mu$.
  2. $\exists \mu_k$ - series of discrete distributions that $\mu_k \rightarrow \mu$.
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    You're right! It's just we use $C$ notation for continuous and bounded, that's my mistake. I actually did prove that but my solution requires two cases for each task (for continuous and discrete cases), but I wonder is there universal solution for both continuous and discrete.2012-06-13

1 Answers 1

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Hints:

  • Every distribution is a barycenter $p\mu_d+(1-p)\mu_c$ where $0\leqslant p\leqslant1$, $\mu_d$ is discrete and $\mu_c$ is continuous.
  • As a consequence, it suffices to show that every discrete distribution is a limit of continuous ones, and vive versa.
  • In one direction, show that, for every $x$, the (continuous) uniform distribution on the interval $[x-\varepsilon,x+\varepsilon]$ converges to the (discrete) Dirac distribution at $x$ when $\varepsilon\to0^+$.
  • In the other direction, show that, for every continuous distribution $\mu_c$, the (discrete) distribution $\sum\limits_n\mu_c([n\varepsilon,(n+1)\varepsilon))\,\delta_{n\varepsilon}$, where the sum runs over every integer $n$, converges to $\mu_c$ when $\varepsilon\to0^+$.