Smith space

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In functional analysis and related areas of mathematics, a Smith space is a complete compactly generated locally convex topological vector space X having a universal compact set, i.e. a compact set K which absorbs every other compact set TX (i.e. TλK for some λ>0).

Smith spaces are named after Marianne Ruth Freundlich Smith, who introduced themTemplate:Sfn as duals to Banach spaces in some versions of duality theory for topological vector spaces. All Smith spaces are stereotype and are in the stereotype duality relations with Banach spaces:Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

  • for any Banach space X its stereotype dual space[1] X is a Smith space,
  • and vice versa, for any Smith space X its stereotype dual space X is a Banach space.

Smith spaces are special cases of Brauner spaces.

Examples

  • As follows from the duality theorems, for any Banach space X its stereotype dual space X is a Smith space. The polar K=B of the unit ball B in X is the universal compact set in X. If X* denotes the normed dual space for X, and X the space X* endowed with the X-weak topology, then the topology of X lies between the topology of X* and the topology of X, so there are natural (linear continuous) bijections
X*XX.
If X is infinite-dimensional, then no two of these topologies coincide. At the same time, for infinite dimensional X the space X is not barreled (and even is not a Mackey space if X is reflexive as a Banach spaceTemplate:Sfn).

See also

Notes

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References

Template:Functional analysis Template:Topological vector spaces

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  1. The stereotype dual space to a locally convex space X is the space X of all linear continuous functionals f:X endowed with the topology of uniform convergence on totally bounded sets in X.