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Template:Short description In functional analysis and related areas of mathematics, the strong dual space of a topological vector space (TVS) X is the continuous dual space X of X equipped with the strong (dual) topology or the topology of uniform convergence on bounded subsets of X, where this topology is denoted by b(X,X) or β(X,X). The coarsest polar topology is called weak topology. The strong dual space plays such an important role in modern functional analysis, that the continuous dual space is usually assumed to have the strong dual topology unless indicated otherwise. To emphasize that the continuous dual space, X, has the strong dual topology, Xb or Xβ may be written.

Strong dual topology

Throughout, all vector spaces will be assumed to be over the field 𝔽 of either the real numbers or complex numbers .

Definition from a dual system

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Let (X,Y,,) be a dual pair of vector spaces over the field 𝔽 of real numbers or complex numbers . For any BX and any yY, define |y|B=supxB|x,y|.

Neither X nor Y has a topology so say a subset BX is said to be Template:Em if |y|B< for all yC. So a subset BX is called Template:Em if and only if supxB|x,y|< for all yY. This is equivalent to the usual notion of bounded subsets when X is given the weak topology induced by Y, which is a Hausdorff locally convex topology.

Let denote the family of all subsets BX bounded by elements of Y; that is, is the set of all subsets BX such that for every yY, |y|B=supxB|x,y|<. Then the Template:Em β(Y,X,,) on Y, also denoted by b(Y,X,,) or simply β(Y,X) or b(Y,X) if the pairing , is understood, is defined as the locally convex topology on Y generated by the seminorms of the form |y|B=supxB|x,y|,yY,B.

The definition of the strong dual topology now proceeds as in the case of a TVS. Note that if X is a TVS whose continuous dual space separates point on X, then X is part of a canonical dual system (X,X,,) where x,x:=x(x). In the special case when X is a locally convex space, the Template:Em on the (continuous) dual space X (that is, on the space of all continuous linear functionals f:X𝔽) is defined as the strong topology β(X,X), and it coincides with the topology of uniform convergence on bounded sets in X, i.e. with the topology on X generated by the seminorms of the form |f|B=supxB|f(x)|, where fX, where B runs over the family of all bounded sets in X. The space X with this topology is called Template:Em of the space X and is denoted by Xβ.

Definition on a TVS

Suppose that X is a topological vector space (TVS) over the field 𝔽. Let be any fundamental system of bounded sets of X; that is, is a family of bounded subsets of X such that every bounded subset of X is a subset of some B; the set of all bounded subsets of X forms a fundamental system of bounded sets of X. A basis of closed neighborhoods of the origin in X is given by the polars: B:={xX:supxB|x(x)|1} as B ranges over ). This is a locally convex topology that is given by the set of seminorms on X: |x|B:=supxB|x(x)| as B ranges over .

If X is normable then so is Xb and Xb will in fact be a Banach space. If X is a normed space with norm then X has a canonical norm (the operator norm) given by x:=supx1|x(x)|; the topology that this norm induces on X is identical to the strong dual topology.

Bidual

Template:See also

The bidual or second dual of a TVS X, often denoted by X, is the strong dual of the strong dual of X: X:=(Xb) where Xb denotes X endowed with the strong dual topology b(X,X). Unless indicated otherwise, the vector space X is usually assumed to be endowed with the strong dual topology induced on it by Xb, in which case it is called the strong bidual of X; that is, X:=(Xb)b where the vector space X is endowed with the strong dual topology b(X,Xb).

Properties

Let X be a locally convex TVS.

If X is a barrelled space, then its topology coincides with the strong topology β(X,X) on X and with the Mackey topology on generated by the pairing (X,X).

Examples

If X is a normed vector space, then its (continuous) dual space X with the strong topology coincides with the Banach dual space X; that is, with the space X with the topology induced by the operator norm. Conversely (X,X).-topology on X is identical to the topology induced by the norm on X.

See also

References

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Bibliography

Template:Functional Analysis Template:DualityInLCTVSs