8 Generalizations 433
The notions of left and right Haar integral obviously coincide if the groupGis
abelian, and it may be shown that they also coincide ifGis compact or is a semi-
simple Lie group.
We now restrict attention to the case of a left Haar integral. It is easily seen that
M(f ̄)=M(f),
wheref ̄(s)=f(s)for everys∈G.Ifweset(f,g)=M(fg ̄), then the usual inner
product properties hold:
(f 1 +f 2 ,g)=(f 1 ,g)+(f 2 ,g),
(λf,g)=λ(f,g),
(f,g)=(g,f),
(f,f)≥ 0 ,with equality only iff≡ 0.
By theRiesz representation theorem, there is a uniquepositive measureμon the
σ-algebraMgenerated by the compact subsets ofG(cf. Chapter XI,§3) such that
μ(K)is finite for every compact setK⊆G,μ(E)is the supremum ofμ(K)over all
compactK⊆Efor eachE∈M,and
M(f)=
∫
G
fdμ for everyf∈C 0 (G).
The measureμis necessarily left invariant:
μ(E)=μ(sE) for allE∈Mands∈G,
wheresE={sx:x∈E}.
Forp=1or2,letLp(G)denote the set of allμ-measurable functionsf:G→C
such that
∫
G
|f|pdμ<∞.
The definition ofMcan be extended toL^1 (G)by setting
M(f)=
∫
G
fdμ,
and the inner product can be extended toL^2 (G)by setting
(f,g)=
∫
G
fg ̄dμ.
Moreover, with this inner productL^2 (G)is aHilbert space.Ifwedefinetheconvolu-
tion product f∗goff,g∈L^1 (G)by
f∗g(s)=
∫
G
f(st)g(t−^1 )dμ(t),