[Math] Nowhere dense subsets of $[0,1]$ with positive measure other than fat Cantor sets

lebesgue-measuremeasure-theory

This is my first time on the board, so forgive me if I've posted incorrectly. In any case, I think my title is self-explanatory: the only examples I've encountered for nowhere dense subsets of $[0,1]$ with positive measure are fat Cantor sets. Is any one familiar with another example?

If it exists, I'd like to find a more-or-less orthogonal example — that is, I'm not so much interested in examples that are constructed in essentially the same way as a fat Cantor set. Thanks very much.

Best,
T

Best Answer

Rather than removing things from the real line recursively like you do for Cantor sets, you could remove them all at once:

Enumerate the rational numbers (or any other countable dense set) in [0,1] as $q_1, q_2, ...$, and let $B_n$ be an open interval of radius $\frac{1}{2^{n+1}}$ centered on $q_n$. Then $[0,1] - \bigcup B_n$ is a closed set (since it's the complement of a union of open sets), and has empty interior (since it contains no rational numbers), thus is nowhere dense. But it clearly has positive measure since we only removed an open set with measure at most $\frac{1}{2}$.

This is similar to the Fat Cantor set in that it's a "start-with-everything-and-take-stuff-away" strategy, but the way we remove that stuff is decidedly different.