Jump to content

Barrelled space

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Dexbot (talk | contribs) at 16:39, 16 April 2016 (Bot: Cleaning up old interwiki links). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

In functional analysis and related areas of mathematics, barrelled spaces are Hausdorff topological vector spaces for which every barrelled set in the space is a neighbourhood for the zero vector. A barrelled set or a barrel in a topological vector space is a set which is convex, balanced, absorbing and closed. Barrelled spaces are studied because a form of the Banach–Steinhaus theorem still holds for them.

History

Barrelled spaces were introduced by Bourbaki (1950).

Examples

Properties

For a Hausdorff locally convex space with continuous dual the following are equivalent:

  • X is barrelled,
  • every -bounded subset of the continuous dual space X' is equicontinuous (this provides a partial converse to the Banach-Steinhaus theorem),[1]
  • for all subsets A of the continuous dual space X', the following properties are equivalent: A is [1]
    • equicontinuous,
    • relatively weakly compact,
    • strongly bounded,
    • weakly bounded,
  • X carries the strong topology ,
  • every lower semi-continuous semi-norm on is continuous,
  • the 0-neighborhood bases in X and the fundamental families of bounded sets in correspond to each other by polarity.[1]

In addition,

  • Every sequentially complete quasibarrelled space is barrelled.
  • A barrelled space need not be Montel, complete, metrizable, unordered Baire-like, nor the inductive limit of Banach spaces.

Quasi-barrelled spaces

A topological vector space for which every barrelled bornivorous set in the space is a neighbourhood of is called a quasi-barrelled space, where a set is bornivorous if it absorbs all bounded subsets of . Every barrelled space is quasi-barrelled.

For a locally convex space with continuous dual the following are equivalent:

  • is quasi-barrelled,
  • every bounded lower semi-continuous semi-norm on is continuous,
  • every -bounded subset of the continuous dual space is equicontinuous.

References

  1. ^ a b c Schaefer (1999) p. 127, 141, Treves (1995) p. 350
  • Bourbaki, Nicolas (1950). "Sur certains espaces vectoriels topologiques". Annales de l'Institut Fourier (in French). 2: 5–16 (1951). MR 0042609.
  • Robertson, Alex P.; Robertson, Wendy J. (1964). Topological vector spaces. Cambridge Tracts in Mathematics. Vol. 53. Cambridge University Press. pp. 65–75.
  • Schaefer, Helmut H. (1971). Topological vector spaces. GTM. Vol. 3. New York: Springer-Verlag. p. 60. ISBN 0-387-98726-6.
  • S.M. Khaleelulla (1982). Counterexamples in Topological Vector Spaces. GTM. Vol. 936. Springer-Verlag. pp. 28–46. ISBN 978-3-540-11565-6.