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$X=(-\infty,\infty)$, $\mathcal{F}_n$ is the $\sigma$-field generated by $[0,1),[1,2),...,[n-1,n)$. Prove $\mathcal{F}_n\subset \mathcal{F}_{n+1}$ and $\cup_{n=1}^\infty\mathcal{F}_n$ is not a $\sigma$-field.

My solution:

$\mathcal{F}_{n+1}=\mathcal{F}_{n}\cup[n,n+1)\Rightarrow \mathcal{F}_n\subset \mathcal{F}_{n+1}$.

Proof by contradiction. If $\cup_{n=1}^\infty\mathcal{F}_n=[0,\infty)$ is a $\sigma$-field, then $\emptyset\in\cup_{n=1}^\infty\mathcal{F}_n \Rightarrow X=(-\infty,\infty)\subset\cup_{n=1}^\infty\mathcal{F}_n=[0,\infty)$, which is a contradiction. So, $\cup_{n=1}^\infty\mathcal{F}_n$ is not a $\sigma$-field.

I wonder if my proof is right or not. Thanks in advance.

The above is wrong. Let me try again.

$\mathcal{F}_{n}=\sigma([0,1),...,[n-1,n)),\mathcal{F}_{n+1}=\sigma([0,1),...,[n-1,n),[n,n+1))$.

Proof by contradiction. If $\mathcal{F}_n\supset \mathcal{F}_{n+1}\Rightarrow \mathcal{F}_n\supset \mathcal{F}_{n+1}\supset\{[0,1),...,[n-1,n),[n,n+1)\}\supset\{[0,1),...,[n-1,n)\}\Rightarrow \mathcal{F}_{n}$ is not the smallest $\sigma$-field containing $\{[0,1),...,[n-1,n)\}$, which is a contradiction.

Proof by contradiction. If $\cup_{n=1}^\infty\mathcal{F}_n$ is a $\sigma$-field, then $\cup_{n=1}^\infty\mathcal{F}_n=\cup_{n=1}^\infty\sigma([0,1),...,[n-1,n))\supset\cup_{n=1}^\infty\{[0,1),...,[n-1,n)\}=[0,\infty)$, i.e., $\cup_{n=1}^\infty\mathcal{F}_n$ is the smallest $\sigma$-field containing $[0,\infty)$. Since $\cup_{n=1}^\infty\mathcal{F}_n$ is a $\sigma$-field, $\emptyset\in\cup_{n=1}^\infty\mathcal{F}_n \Rightarrow X\in\cup_{n=1}^\infty\mathcal{F}_n\Rightarrow X=(-\infty,\infty)$ is also the smallest $\sigma$-field containing $[0,\infty)$, which is not true. So, $\cup_{n=1}^\infty\mathcal{F}_n$ is not a $\sigma$-field.

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    It is not true that $\mathcal{F}_{n+1}=\mathcal{F}_{n}\cup[n,n+1)$.What you want is that relation on the generating sets implies that $\mathcal{F}_n\subseteq \mathcal{F}_{n+1}$. To add more, it seems as if you are looking at the problem wrong. The $\mathcal{F}_n$ are not subsets of $\mathbb{R}$ but sets of subsets of $\mathbb{R}$. Therefore $X$ cannot be a subset of $\bigcup_{n=1}^\infty$ as that union is a set of subsets of $\mathbb{B}$ and not a subset of $\mathbb{R}$. Therefore your proof is not right. I have not yet thought about how to prove it though.2012-12-07
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    Note that $\mathcal F_n$ is a subset of $2^X$ hence $\mathcal F_n$ contains no real number hence $\mathcal F_{n}\cup[n,n+1)$ has nothing to do with anything.2012-12-07
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    Thank you, user45150 and did. Let me keep thinking.2012-12-07
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    I think you are taking mistake, because if $F_{n}$ be $\sigma$-field is generated with those intervals in $X$ so they should have complements of those intervals in $X$ too, so for examples we can make $(-n,n)$ on $F_{n}$ so also $\mathbb{R}$ is in $\cup_{n=1}^{\infty}F_{n}$ too and your reason for non-$\sigma$-field is wrong!2012-12-07
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    In my above comment I should correct that $F_{n}$ contains it's element's complement and also $\emptyset$ and $\mathbb{R}$ , but not $(-n,n)$, I'm sorry, but look below proofs. and be careful about using nomads and symbols, $(-\infty,\infty)$ is not $\sigma$-field itself , a $\sigma$-field is a subset of powerset of something with some conditions!2012-12-08

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