Strictly singular operator

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In functional analysis, a branch of mathematics, a strictly singular operator is a bounded linear operator between normed spaces which is not bounded below on any infinite-dimensional subspace.

Definitions.

Let X and Y be normed linear spaces, and denote by B(X,Y) the space of bounded operators of the form T:XY. Let AX be any subset. We say that T is bounded below on A whenever there is a constant c(0,) such that for all xA, the inequality Txcx holds. If A=X, we say simply that T is bounded below.

Now suppose X and Y are Banach spaces, and let IdXB(X) and IdYB(Y) denote the respective identity operators. An operator TB(X,Y) is called inessential whenever IdXST is a Fredholm operator for every SB(Y,X). Equivalently, T is inessential if and only if IdYTS is Fredholm for every SB(Y,X). Denote by (X,Y) the set of all inessential operators in B(X,Y).

An operator TB(X,Y) is called strictly singular whenever it fails to be bounded below on any infinite-dimensional subspace of X. Denote by 𝒮𝒮(X,Y) the set of all strictly singular operators in B(X,Y). We say that TB(X,Y) is finitely strictly singular whenever for each ϵ>0 there exists n such that for every subspace E of X satisfying dim(E)n, there is xE such that Tx<ϵx. Denote by 𝒮𝒮(X,Y) the set of all finitely strictly singular operators in B(X,Y).

Let BX={xX:x1} denote the closed unit ball in X. An operator TB(X,Y) is compact whenever TBX={Tx:xBX} is a relatively norm-compact subset of Y, and denote by 𝒦(X,Y) the set of all such compact operators.

Properties.

Strictly singular operators can be viewed as a generalization of compact operators, as every compact operator is strictly singular. These two classes share some important properties. For example, if X is a Banach space and T is a strictly singular operator in B(X) then its spectrum σ(T) satisfies the following properties: (i) the cardinality of σ(T) is at most countable; (ii) 0σ(T) (except possibly in the trivial case where X is finite-dimensional); (iii) zero is the only possible limit point of σ(T); and (iv) every nonzero λσ(T) is an eigenvalue. This same "spectral theorem" consisting of (i)-(iv) is satisfied for inessential operators in B(X).

Classes 𝒦, 𝒮𝒮, 𝒮𝒮, and all form norm-closed operator ideals. This means, whenever X and Y are Banach spaces, the component spaces 𝒦(X,Y), 𝒮𝒮(X,Y), 𝒮𝒮(X,Y), and (X,Y) are each closed subspaces (in the operator norm) of B(X,Y), such that the classes are invariant under composition with arbitrary bounded linear operators.

In general, we have 𝒦(X,Y)𝒮𝒮(X,Y)𝒮𝒮(X,Y)(X,Y), and each of the inclusions may or may not be strict, depending on the choices of X and Y.

Examples.

Every bounded linear map T:pq, for 1q,p<, pq, is strictly singular. Here, p and q are sequence spaces. Similarly, every bounded linear map T:c0p and T:pc0, for 1p<, is strictly singular. Here c0 is the Banach space of sequences converging to zero. This is a corollary of Pitt's theorem, which states that such T, for q < p, are compact.

If 1p<q< then the formal identity operator Ip,qB(p,q) is finitely strictly singular but not compact. If 1<p<q< then there exist "Pelczynski operators" in B(p,q) which are uniformly bounded below on copies of 2n, n, and hence are strictly singular but not finitely strictly singular. In this case we have 𝒦(p,q)𝒮𝒮(p,q)𝒮𝒮(p,q). However, every inessential operator with codomain q is strictly singular, so that 𝒮𝒮(p,q)=(p,q). On the other hand, if X is any separable Banach space then there exists a bounded below operator TB(X,) any of which is inessential but not strictly singular. Thus, in particular, 𝒦(p,)𝒮𝒮(p,)𝒮𝒮(p,)(p,) for all 1<p<.

Duality.

The compact operators form a symmetric ideal, which means T𝒦(X,Y) if and only if T*𝒦(Y*,X*). However, this is not the case for classes 𝒮𝒮, 𝒮𝒮, or . To establish duality relations, we will introduce additional classes.

If Z is a closed subspace of a Banach space Y then there exists a "canonical" surjection QZ:YY/Z defined via the natural mapping yy+Z. An operator TB(X,Y) is called strictly cosingular whenever given an infinite-dimensional closed subspace Z of Y, the map QZT fails to be surjective. Denote by 𝒮𝒞𝒮(X,Y) the subspace of strictly cosingular operators in B(X,Y).

Theorem 1. Let X and Y be Banach spaces, and let TB(X,Y). If T* is strictly singular (resp. strictly cosingular) then T is strictly cosingular (resp. strictly singular).

Note that there are examples of strictly singular operators whose adjoints are neither strictly singular nor strictly cosingular (see Plichko, 2004). Similarly, there are strictly cosingular operators whose adjoints are not strictly singular, e.g. the inclusion map I:c0. So 𝒮𝒮 is not in full duality with 𝒮𝒞𝒮.

Theorem 2. Let X and Y be Banach spaces, and let TB(X,Y). If T* is inessential then so is T.

References

Aiena, Pietro, Fredholm and Local Spectral Theory, with Applications to Multipliers (2004), ISBN 1-4020-1830-4.

Plichko, Anatolij, "Superstrictly Singular and Superstrictly Cosingular Operators," North-Holland Mathematics Studies 197 (2004), pp239-255.