1. Introduction
By the classical Steinhaus Theorem [
1], for any Lebesgue measurable subsets
A of positive Lebesgue measure on the real line, the set
is a neighborhood of zero in
. In [
2], Weil extended this result of Steinhaus to all locally compact topological groups proving that for any measurable subset
A of positive Haar measure in a locally compact topological group
X, the set
is a neighborhood of the identity in
X. This result implies that any non-open Haar measurable subgroup of a locally compact topological group
X has Haar measure zero.
A Baire category analogue of the Steinhaus–Weil Theorem was obtained by Ostrowski [
3], Piccard [
4] and Pettis [
5], who proved that for any nonmeager subset
A with the Baire property in a Baire topological group
X, the set
is a neighborhood of the identity. This implies that any non-open subgroup with the Baire property in a Baire topological group
X is meager in
X. We recall that a subset
A of a topological space
X has the
Baire property in
X if there exists a Borel subset
such that the symmetric difference
is meager in
X.
Therefore, any non-open Borel subgroup of a locally compact group
X is meager and has Haar measure zero. For analytic subgroups of the real line, this result was essentially improved by Laczkovich [
6], who proved that every analytic subgroup of the real line can be covered by countably many closed sets of Lebesgue measure zero. In this paper, we generalize this result of Laczkovich to
K-analytic subgroups of locally compact groups.
A Tychonoff space
A is called
K-analytic if
A is a continuous image of a Lindelöf Čech-complete space. By a
locally compact group, we understand a Tychonoff (equivalently, Hausdorff) locally compact topological group. A
Haar measure on a locally compact group
X is any non-trivial left-invariant inner regular Borel
-additive measure on
X such that any compact set in
X has finite measure. It is well-known (see [
7] or ([
8] Chapter 44)) that any locally compact group
X possesses a Haar measure, and two Haar measures on
X differ by a positive real multiplier. A subset
A of a locally compact group
X is called
Haar-null if it is contained in a Borel subset of Haar measure zero in
X.
The main result of this paper is the following theorem.
Theorem 1. Let be two K-analytic subsets of a locally compact group X. If the set has empty interior in X, then A or B is contained in the union of closed nowhere dense sets in X. If, moreover, is meager in X, then the closed nowhere dense sets can be chosen to have Haar measure zero.
Theorem 1 will be proved in
Section 3. Now, we discuss some applications of this theorem.
Corollary 1. If a K-analytic subset A of a locally compact group X cannot be covered by countably many closed Haar-null sets in X, then the product is not meager in X and has a nonempty interior in X.
Corollary 2. A K-analytic subsemigroup A of a locally compact group X has an empty interior in X if and only if A can be covered by countably many closed Haar-null sets in X.
Corollary 3. Each nonopen K-analytic subgroup of a locally compact group X can be covered by countably many closed Haar-null sets in X.
Now we shall apply Corollary 1 to the problem of automatic continuity of additive real–valued functions on locally compact groups. A function on a group X is called additive if for any elements .
Corollary 4. An additive function on a locally compact group X is continuous if and only if for some K-analytic set , which cannot be covered by countably many closed Haar-null sets in X.
Proof. The “only if” part is trivial. To prove the “if” part, assume that
for some
K-analytic set
that cannot be covered by countably many closed Haar-null sets in
X. By Corollary 1, the set
contains some nonempty open set
U. The additivity of
f ensures that
. Choose any element
and any neighborhood
of the identity such that
and
. For every
, we have
, and hence
Then,
. The equality
implies that the upper bounded set
is symmetric and hence bounded in the real line.
Now, we are ready to prove that the additive function f is continuous. Given any , find such that . By the continuity of the multiplication in the topological group X, there exists a neighborhood of the identity in X such that . Observe that for every , we have and hence , which means that f is continuous at the identity of X and hence f is continuous everywhere by the additivity of f. □
Following Kuczma and Ger [
9], for a topological group
X, let us consider the class
(resp.
) of all sets
such that an additive function
is continuous whenever the restriction
is (upper) bounded. It is clear that
. On the other hand,
if
X admits a discontinuous additive function
. In this case the set
witnesses that
. Repeating the argument of the proof of Corollary 4 (see also the proofs of Lemma 9.2.1 and Theorem 9.2.5 in [
10]), we can show that a subset
A of a topological group
X belongs to the Kuczma–Ger class
if for some
the product
of
n copies of the set
A in
X has nonempty interior in
X. Reformulating Corollary 4 in terms of Kuczma–Ger classes, we obtain our last corollary of Theorem 1.
Corollary 5. Let X be a locally compact group. Every K-analytic set that cannot be covered by countably many closed Haar-null sets in X belongs to the Kuczma–Ger classes and .
A subset
A of a topological group
X is called
Haar–null if there exists a Borel set
in
X and a probability Radon measure
on
X such that
for any
. Haar-null sets were introduced by Christensen [
11] who proved that a subset of a locally compact group is Haar-null if and only if its Haar measure is zero. For more information on Haar-null sets and their generalizations, see [
12,
13]. By ([
12], Example 8.1), the Polish group
contains a non-open Borel subgroup, which cannot be covered by countably many closed Haar-null sets in
. By [
14], the countable product of lines contains a meager Borel linear subspace
that cannot be covered by countably many Haar-null sets in
. Then, any discontinuous additive function
with
witnesses that the linear space
L does not belong to the Kuczma–Ger class
. Those examples show that Corollaries 1–5 cannot be generalized beyond the class of locally compact groups.
2. Preliminaries
In this section, we collect some known facts on K-analytic spaces and locally compact groups.
A Tychonoff topological space X is called
Čech-complete if X is homeomorphic to a -subset of some compact Hausdorff space;
K-analytic if for some continuous function defined on a Lindelöf Čech-complete space;
analytic if for some continuous function defined on a Polish space P.
Theorem 2.6.1 in [
15] implies that in the class of Tychonoff spaces, our definition of a
K-analytic space is equivalent to the original definition (via upper semicontinuous compact-valued maps) given in [
15]. In the following lemma, we collect some known properties of
K-analytic spaces. The first two statements of this lemma are proved in Theorems 2.5.5 and 5.5.1 of [
15], and the last statement follows from Corollary 2.9.4 in [
15] and Theorem 12 in [
16].
Lemma 1. - 1.
The product of two K-analytic spaces is K-analytic.
- 2.
Every separable metrizable K-analytic space is analytic.
- 3.
Every K-analytic subspace of a Tychonoff space X has the Baire property in X.
A subset A of a topological space X is functionally open (resp. functionally closed) if for some continuous map to a metrizable separable space Y and some open (resp. closed) subset B of Y. It is easy to see that a Hausdorff space is Tychonoff if and only if it has a base of the topology consisting of functionally open sets.
Lemma 2. For any meager subset M of a Lindelöf locally compact group X, there exists a compact normal subgroup K of X such that the quotient group is Polish and for the quotient homomorphism the image is a meager subset of the Polish group .
Proof. Find a sequence of closed nowhere dense subsets
in
X such that
. Being Lindelöf and locally compact, the topological group
X is
-compact and hence has countable Souslin number, see ([
17], 5.4.8). Using Kuratowski–Zorn Lemma, for every
choose a maximal family
of pairwise disjoint functionally open subsets of
X that are contained in the open set
. The countability of the Souslin number of
X implies that the family
is countable, and hence its union
is a functionally open set in
X. By the maximality of
, the set
is dense in
X, and hence the complement
is a nowhere dense functionally closed set in
X containing the nowhere dense set
. By Theorem 8.1.6 and Lemma 8.1.2 in [
17], there exists a normal compact
-subgroup
K of
X such that
for all
. Let
be the quotient topological group and
be the quotient homomorphism. The openness of
q and nowhere density of the sets
in
X imply the nowhere density of the sets
in the quotient group
. Then,
is a meager subset of
.
By ([
17], 3.1.23), the quotient group
is locally compact. Since
K is a
-set in
X, the locally compact group
has countable (pseudo)character and hence is first-countable and metrizable by Birkhoff–Kakutani Theorem ([
17], 3.3.12). Since
X is Lindelöf, so is the quotient space
. Being Lindelöf and metrizable, the locally compact space
is separable and Polish. □
Lemma 3. Let K be a compact normal subgroup of a locally compact group X and be the quotient homomorphism. For any Haar-null set A in , the pre-image is Haar-null in X.
Proof. Let be a Haar measure on X. Consider the Borel measure on , assigning to each Borel subset the number . It is easy to see that is a Haar measure on . Then, for any Haar-null set , the set has Haar measure and hence is Haar-null in X. □
The following general version of the Steinhaus Theorem VII in [
1] was proved in [
18].
Lemma 4. If Borel subsets of a locally compact Polish group X are not Haar-null, then their product has a nonempty interior in X.
3. Proof of Theorem 1
Theorem 1 follows from Lemmas 6 and 7, proved in this section. In the proof of Lemma 6, we shall use the following lemma, whose proof goes along the lines of the proof of Theorem 3.2 in [
12].
Lemma 5. Let be analytic sets in a locally compact Polish group X. If is meager in X, then for some the set can be covered by countably many closed Haar-null sets in X.
Proof. Let be the family of all subsets of X that can be covered by countably many closed Haar-null sets in X. To derive a contradiction, assume that the set is meager in X, but for every the set does not belong to the -ideal . By our assumption, the set is analytic and hence admits a surjective continuous map defined on a Polish space . Let be the family of all open subsets such that . Since the Polish space is hereditarily Lindelöf, the union belongs to the family . By our assumption, , which implies that the complement is not empty. Moreover, the maximality of the family guarantees that for every nonempty open set the image does not belong to the family .
Since the set is meager in X, there exists an increasing sequence of closed nowhere dense sets in X such that . Consider the continuous map p: , p: . Then, is an increasing sequence of closed sets whose union contains the subset of the topological group . By the continuity of the maps , for every the set : is closed in the Polish space . Since , we can apply the Baire Theorem and find such that the closed set has nonempty interior in the space . Then, there exist nonempty open sets and such that . By the maximality of the families , the sets and do not belong to the family and hence their closures and have a positive Haar measure in X. By Lemma 4, the product has a nonempty interior in X. The inclusion implies and hence by the continuity of the map p. Then, the set has a nonempty interior in X and is not nowhere dense in X, which is a desired contradiction completing the proof. □
Lemma 6. Let be K-analytic sets in a locally compact group X. If is meager in X, then for some the set can be covered by countably many closed Haar-null sets in X.
Proof. Assume that the set is meager in X. By Lemma 1 (1), the product of the K-analytic spaces is K-analytic and hence Lindelöf and so is the continuous image of . Then, is contained in an open Lindelöf subgroup of the locally compact group X. Replacing X by this open subgroup, we can assume that the locally compact group X is Lindelöf. By Lemma 2, there exists a compact normal subgroup K in X such that the quotient group is Polish and locally compact, and for the quotient homomorphism , the image is meager in . By Lemma 1 (2), for every , the K-analytic subspace of the Polish group is analytic. Since the product is meager in the locally compact Polish group , we can apply Lemma 5 and conclude that for some , the set is contained in the union of closed Haar-null sets in . Then, the set is contained in the countable union of closed Haar-null sets in the locally compact group X, see Lemma 3. □
Lemma 7. For any nonmeager K-analytic sets in a topological group X, the product has a nonempty interior in X.
Proof. By Lemma 1 (3), the K-analytic sets have the Baire property in X. Then, for every , there exists a -set in X such that and the complement is meager in X. Since the set is not meager in X, the set is not meager in X. In particular, is not nowhere dense in X. Then, there exists a nonempty open set such that is dense in . We claim that . Indeed, for any the intersection is a nonempty open set in X. It follows that and are dense -sets in U. The topological group X contains a non-meager subset, and hence is not meager. The topological homogeneity of X implies that every nonempty open set of X is not meager, and hence the space X is Baire and so is the open subspace U of X. Then, the intersection is not empty and hence contains some point g. Then and hence . Therefore, , which means that the set has a nonempty interior in X. □