Webbed space

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Short description: Space where open mapping and closed graph theorems hold

In mathematics, particularly in functional analysis, a webbed space is a topological vector space designed with the goal of allowing the results of the open mapping theorem and the closed graph theorem to hold for a wider class of linear maps whose codomains are webbed spaces. A space is called webbed if there exists a collection of sets, called a web that satisfies certain properties. Webs were first investigated by de Wilde.

Web

Let X be a Hausdorff locally convex topological vector space. A web is a stratified collection of disks satisfying the following absorbency and convergence requirements.[1]

  1. Stratum 1: The first stratum must consist of a sequence D1,D2,D3, of disks in X such that their union iDi absorbs X.
  2. Stratum 2: For each disk Di in the first stratum, there must exists a sequence Di1,Di2,Di3, of disks in X such that for every Di: Dij(12)Di for every j and jDij absorbs Di. The sets (Dij)i,j will form the second stratum.
  3. Stratum 3: To each disk Dij in the second stratum, assign another sequence Dij1,Dij2,Dij3, of disks in X satisfying analogously defined properties; explicitly, this means that for every Di,j: Dijk(12)Dij for every k and kDijk absorbs Dij. The sets (Dijk)i,j,k form the third stratum.

Continue this process to define strata 4,5,. That is, use induction to define stratum n+1 in terms of stratum n.

A strand is a sequence of disks, with the first disk being selected from the first stratum, say Di, and the second being selected from the sequence that was associated with Di, and so on. We also require that if a sequence of vectors (xn) is selected from a strand (with x1 belonging to the first disk in the strand, x2 belonging to the second, and so on) then the series n=1xn converges.

A Hausdorff locally convex topological vector space on which a web can be defined is called a webbed space.

Examples and sufficient conditions

Theorem[2] (de Wilde 1978) — A topological vector space X is a Fréchet space if and only if it is both a webbed space and a Baire space.

All of the following spaces are webbed:

  • Fréchet spaces.[2]
  • Projective limits and inductive limits of sequences of webbed spaces.
  • A sequentially closed vector subspace of a webbed space.[3]
  • Countable products of webbed spaces.[3]
  • A Hausdorff quotient of a webbed space.[3]
  • The image of a webbed space under a sequentially continuous linear map if that image is Hausdorff.[3]
  • The bornologification of a webbed space.
  • The continuous dual space of a metrizable locally convex space endowed with the strong dual topology is webbed.[2]
  • If X is the strict inductive limit of a denumerable family of locally convex metrizable spaces, then the continuous dual space of X with the strong topology is webbed.[4]
  • If X is a webbed space, then any Hausdorff locally convex topology weaker than this (webbed) topology is also webbed.[3]

Theorems

Closed Graph Theorem[6] — Let A:XY be a linear map between TVSs that is sequentially closed (meaning that its graph is a sequentially closed subset of X×Y). If Y is a webbed space and X is an ultrabornological space (such as a Fréchet space or an inductive limit of Fréchet spaces), then A is continuous.

Closed Graph Theorem — Any closed linear map from the inductive limit of Baire locally convex spaces into a webbed locally convex space is continuous.

Open Mapping Theorem — Any continuous surjective linear map from a webbed locally convex space onto an inductive limit of Baire locally convex spaces is open.

Open Mapping Theorem[6] — Any continuous surjective linear map from a webbed locally convex space onto an ultrabornological space is open.

Open Mapping Theorem[6] — If the image of a closed linear operator A:XY from locally convex webbed space X into Hausdorff locally convex space Y is nonmeager in Y then A:XY is a surjective open map.

If the spaces are not locally convex, then there is a notion of web where the requirement of being a disk is replaced by the requirement of being balanced. For such a notion of web we have the following results:

Closed Graph Theorem — Any closed linear map from the inductive limit of Baire topological vector spaces into a webbed topological vector space is continuous.

See also

Citations

References