Barrelled space
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
- In a semi normed vector space the closed unit ball is a barrel.
- Every locally convex topological vector space has a neighbourhood basis consisting of barrelled sets, although the space itself need not be a barreled space.
- Fréchet spaces, and in particular Banach spaces, are barrelled, but generally a normed vector space is not barrelled.
- Montel spaces are barrelled. Consequently, strong duals of Montel spaces are barrelled (since they are Montel spaces).
- locally convex spaces which are Baire spaces are barrelled.
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
- 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.