Locally finite operator
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In mathematics, a linear operator is called locally finite if the space is the union of a family of finite-dimensional -invariant subspaces.[1][2]Template:Rp
In other words, there exists a family of linear subspaces of , such that we have the following:
- Each is finite-dimensional.
An equivalent condition only requires to be the spanned by finite-dimensional -invariant subspaces.[3][4] If is also a Hilbert space, sometimes an operator is called locally finite when the sum of the is only dense in .[2]Template:Rp
Examples
- Every linear operator on a finite-dimensional space is trivially locally finite.
- Every diagonalizable (i.e. there exists a basis of whose elements are all eigenvectors of ) linear operator is locally finite, because it is the union of subspaces spanned by finitely many eigenvectors of .
- The operator on , the space of polynomials with complex coefficients, defined by , is not locally finite; any -invariant subspace is of the form for some , and so has infinite dimension.
- The operator on defined by is locally finite; for any , the polynomials of degree at most form a -invariant subspace.[5]
References
- ↑ Template:Cite arXiv
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Template:Cite book
- ↑ Template:Cite journal
- ↑ Template:Cite conference
- ↑ Joppy (Apr 28, 2018), answer to "Locally Finite Operator". Mathematics StackExchange. StackOverflow.