Arun Ram
Department of Mathematics and Statistics
University of Melbourne
Parkville, VIC 3010 Australia
aram@unimelb.edu.au
Last updated: 4 November 2014
Lecture 30: Examples of linear operators
Let and be normed vector spaces over where
or
A bounded linear operator from to is a linear operator
such that there exists
such that if then
The norm of is the minimal that works.
Let be a normed vector space and let
Then and
Let or and let
be a linear operator. Then the function
is continuous (Really? Why?). Let
Since is closed and bounded,
is compact. Since is continuous,
is compact. So
is closed and bounded in So
Let
with norm given by
Let
be given by
Let be the sequence in
given by
Then
(the area under and
in
since
So there does not exist such that if
then
Let
be a bounded sequence in Define by
The norm on is
A basis of is
where
Then
So
Let
in Then
where
So So
Let
with the sup norm
Let be given by
If is the function given by
then
since So
If
then
So
Thus
Integral operators. Let
with norm given by
Let
be a continuous function. Define by
(generalised matrix multiplication!).
To show:
(a)
If then
(b)
is a bounded linear operator.
(a)
Assume
To show: is continuous.
In fact we will show: is uniformly continuous.
To show: If then there exists
such that if
and then
Assume
Since
is compact and is continuous then is uniformly continuous.
Let be such that if
and
then
To show: If and
then
Assume and
To show:
So is uniformly continuous.
So is continuous and so
(b)
To show: is a bounded linear operator.
To show: There exists such that if
then
Since
is compact and is continuous is compact and
is bounded.
Let
To show: If then
Assume
Then
So
So
So is bounded.
Notes and References
These are a typed copy of Lecture 30 from a series of handwritten lecture notes for the class Metric and Hilbert Spaces given on September 17, 2014.