Lebesgue's lemma

From testwiki
Revision as of 12:53, 11 June 2024 by imported>Dexxor (use Template:For)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:For

In mathematics, Lebesgue's lemma is an important statement in approximation theory. It provides a bound for the projection error, controlling the error of approximation by a linear subspace based on a linear projection relative to the optimal error together with the operator norm of the projection.

Statement

Let Template:Math be a normed vector space, Template:Mvar a subspace of Template:Mvar, and Template:Mvar a linear projector on Template:Mvar. Then for each Template:Mvar in Template:Mvar:

vPv(1+P)infuUvu.

The proof is a one-line application of the triangle inequality: for any Template:Mvar in Template:Mvar, by writing Template:Math as Template:Math, it follows that

vPvvu+uPu+P(uv)(1+P)uv

where the last inequality uses the fact that Template:Math together with the definition of the operator norm Template:Math.

See also

References