This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. The specific problem is: The organization of this article needs to be reconsidered. Theorems and their proofs are placed into different sections and for some proofs it is not clear which result they are associated with. (September 2024) |
In the mathematical field of real analysis, the monotone convergence theorem is any of a number of related theorems proving the good convergence behaviour of monotonic sequences, i.e. sequences that are non-increasing, or non-decreasing. In its simplest form, it says that a non-decreasing bounded-above sequence of real numbers converges to its smallest upper bound, its supremum. Likewise, a non-increasing bounded-below sequence converges to its largest lower bound, its infimum. In particular, infinite sums of non-negative numbers converge to the supremum of the partial sums if and only if the partial sums are bounded.
For sums of non-negative increasing sequences , it says that taking the sum and the supremum can be interchanged.
In more advanced mathematics the monotone convergence theorem usually refers to a fundamental result in measure theory due to Lebesgue and Beppo Levi that says that for sequences of non-negative pointwise-increasing measurable functions , taking the integral and the supremum can be interchanged with the result being finite if either one is finite.