1. borel - Noun
2. Borel - Proper noun
See Borrel.
Source: Webster's dictionaryA subset of the Cantor set which is not Borel measurable The Borel measure is not complete. Source: Internet
D. from the Sorbonne with the seminal thesis on "Integral, Length, Area", submitted with Borel, four years older, as advisor. citation Lebesgue married the sister of one of his fellow students, and he and his wife had two children, Suzanne and Jacques. Source: Internet
By convention a topological space is assumed to be equipped with the Borel algebra unless otherwise specified. Source: Internet
Continuous functions are Borel functions but not all Borel functions are continuous. Source: Internet
Émile Borel and John von Neumann had the fundamental and surprising insight that probability provides a way out of this conundrum. Source: Internet
Émile Borel in 1895 was the first to state and prove a form of what is now called the Heine–Borel theorem. Source: Internet