Banach and Hilbert spaces
Arun Ram
Department of Mathematics and Statistics
University of Melbourne
Parkville, VIC 3010 Australia
aram@unimelb.edu.au
Last updates: 18 May 2011
Banach and Hilbert spaces
Let be the field of complex numbers.
A complex vector space
is an abelian group
with a function
such that
- (a)
If and
then
,
- (b)
If and
then
,
- (c)
If and
then
,
- (d)
If
then
.
Let
and
be complex vector spaces.
A
linear transformation from
to
is a function
such that
if
and
then
.
| |
The morphisms in the category of vector spaces are linear transformations.
A topological vector space is a
complex vector space with a topology such that addition and scalar multiplication
are continuous maps. The morphisms in the category of topological vector spaces are continuous linear transformations.
Let be a complex vector space.
A set is convex
if satisfies
if
then
.
| |
A topological vector space
is
locally convex if
has a basis of neighbourhoods of 0 consisting of convex sets.
Let be a complex vector space and let be a convex subset of .
A function is
convex if satisfies
if
then
.
| |
HW: Show that the exponential function is
convex.
A normed linear space is a complex vector space with a function
such that
- (a)
if then
,
- (b)
if and
then
,
- (c)
if and
then .
HW: Show that if is a normed linear space then the map
is uniformly continuous, is a metric space
with respect to the metric
defined by
and, with the metric space topology,
is a topological vector space.
A Banach space is a normed linear space
such that is a complete metric space with respect to the metric
defined by
.
| |
Let
and
be normed linear spaces.
An
isometry from
to
is a
linear transformation
such that
if
then
.
| |
Let
and
be normed linear spaces.
The
norm of a linear transformation
is
.
| |
A linear transformation is
bounded if
.
HW:
If and are normed linear spaces such that points are closed
then a linear transformation
is continuous iff it is bounded (reference???)
HW:
Show that if and are normed linear spaces then
with
is a normed linear space and that if is a Banach space then
is a Banach space.
A Hilbert space is a complex vector space with a
function such that
- (a)
if
then
,
- (b) if
and
then
- (c)
if v∈V and
⟨v,v⟩
=0 then
v=0,
- (d)
V is a Banach space with norm
‖‖
:V→ℝ≥0
given by
‖v‖2
=⟨v,v⟩.
Let V be a Hilbert space and let
T:V→V
be a linear transformation.
The adjoint of T is the linear transformation
T*
:V→V
defined by
⟨T
v1,
v2
⟩
=
⟨
v1
,
T*
v2
⟩
,
| |
for
v1,
v2∈V.
The linear transformation
T:V→V
is
unitary
if
T satisfies
if
v1,
v2∈V
then
⟨
Tv1,
Tv2
⟩
=
⟨v1
,
v2
⟩
.
| |
Duals
Let X with
‖‖:V→
ℝ≥0
be a normed linear space. Define
X*
=
{φ:X→ℂ
|
φis a linear transformation and
‖φ‖<∞},
| |
where
‖φ‖
=
sup{
‖φ(x)‖
|
x∈X
such that
‖x‖
≤1
}
.
| |
Then, see [Ru, 5.21 and Ch. 5 Ex. 8],
- (a)
X* is a Banach space.
- (b)
X* separates points on X, i.e.
if x1,x2
∈X and x1≠
x2 then there exists φ∈
X* such that
φ(x1)
≠
φ(x2)
.
- (c)
The map
ι:
X
⟶
X**
x
⟼
ιx:
X*
→
ℂ
φ
↦
φ(x)
| |
is an injective linear map such that
‖ιx‖
=
‖x‖
.
The construction of
f in part (b) is a special case (or
corollary) of the Hahn-Banach theorem, see [Ru, 5.21 and Theorem 5.20].
If M is a subspace of a normed linear space
X and φ:M→ℂ
is a bounded linear functional then there exists a bounded linear functional
Φ:X→ℂ such that
- (a)
if m∈M then
Φ(m)=
φ(m),
- (b)
‖Φ‖
=
‖φ‖
.
The proof of this theorem is essentially by induction, where the induction step
extends φ
from M to
M+ℂx0
for a vector x0 which
is not in M.
Notes and References
These notes were synthesized from [Ru], [Kirillov], ... ?????
They have evolved over the years through graduate courses in "Representation Theory" at University of
Wisconsin, Madison and a course in "Measure Theory" at the Masters level at University of Melbourne.
This presentation follows [Ru, Chapters 4 and 5].
References
[Ru]
W. Rudin,
Real and complex analysis, Third edition, McGraw-Hill, 1987.
MR0924157.
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