Locally finite operator

From HandWiki

In mathematics, a linear operator f:VV is called locally finite if the space V is the union of a family of finite-dimensional f-invariant subspaces.

In other words, there exists a family {Vi|iI} of linear subspaces of V, such that we have the following:

  • iIVi=V
  • (iI)f[Vi]Vi
  • Each Vi is finite-dimensional.

Examples

  • Every linear operator on a finite-dimensional space is trivially locally finite.
  • Every diagonalizable (i.e. there exists a basis of V whose elements are all eigenvectors of f) linear operator is locally finite, because it is the union of subspaces spanned by finitely many eigenvectors of f.