I'm having trouble proving the following statement: let $\Omega \subset \mathbb{R}^n$ be an open set, let $h: \Omega \mapsto \mathbb{R}$ and $\rho : \Omega \mapsto [0,+\infty)$ be Lebesgue-measurable functions and suppose that $\int_{\Omega} \rho \, d \mu =1$. Prove that, if $\mu$ denotes the Lebesgue measure on $\mathbb{R}^n$, for every $p \in [1,+\infty)$: $$ \left( \int_{\Omega} |h| \rho \, d \mu \right)^p \le \int_{\Omega} |h|^p \rho \, d \mu $$ At first sight, I was thinking about Jensen's inequality because $f(x)=|x|^p$ is convex if $p \ge 1 $, but the hypothesis $\mu(\Omega)=1$ is not satified, so we cannot apply that, at least not directly. On the other hand, I can't figure out how classical measure theory inequalities (for instance, Holder's) can work here. I would appreciate any hint.
2026-03-27 12:17:37.1774613857
Inequality in measure theory
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This is Jensen's inequality -- let $d \nu = \rho d \mu$. Then, its easy to see $\nu(\Omega) = 1$ and $\nu$ is thus a probability measure, and you have the usual Jensen's inequality with respect to $\nu$.
If you want to think of it in probability terms, $\rho$ is a probability density function by virtue of its definition wrt the lebesgue measure. The left hand side is $E[|h(X)|]^p$ and the right is $E[|h(X)|^p]$ where $X \sim \rho$.