A nuclear vector space is a locally convex topological vector space that is as far from being a normed vector space as possible. Any map from a nuclear space into a normed vector space is compact, whence the only normed nuclear spaces are finite dimensional.
Nuclear spaces have very good properties with regard to topological tensor product?s and duality.
To define a nuclear space we need to start with the concept of a nuclear map, first between Banach spaces.
Let and be Banach spaces. Let be the Banach space of continuous linear maps . Let denote the dual Banach space of . Let denote the completion of the projective tensor product of and . The bilinear map extends to a continuous linear map (which might not be injective).
Let and be Banach spaces. A linear map is nuclear if it lies in the image in of the completion of the projective tensor product .
From the notion of nuclear maps between Banach spaces we can define nuclear maps between arbitrary LCTVS. In essence, a linear map between arbitrary LCTVS is nuclear if it factors through a nuclear map of Banach spaces.
To make this precise, we need to recall how to associate Banach spaces to certain subsets of an LCTVS. Let be an LCTVS and a convex circled -neighbourhood. Then we can define a Banach space as follows: as is convex and circled, its Minkowski functional is a semi-norm on . The quotient is therefore a normed vector space. As is a -neighbourhood, the quotient mapping defines a continuous linear function . We define to be the Banach completion of .
There is a dual notion. Let be an LCTVS and a convex, circled, and bounded subset of . Let be the span of in . Then is absorbing in and so its Minkowski functional is defined. If is Hausdorff then cannot contain a linear subspace and thus is a normed vector space. We cannot complete to a Banach space but it might so happen that it is one. As is bounded, the inclusion is continuous.
(There is no danger of confusing the two notations since if admits a bounded -neighbourhood then it is a normed vector space.)
Now we say that a continuous linear map is bounded if for some -neighbourhood of (which we may take to be circled and convex), is bounded in . In which case, factors through a continuous map where is bounded and contains .
Let and be LCTVS. A linear map is nuclear if there exists a convex circled -neighbourhood, say , in and a convex circled bounded, say , in with complete such that and the associated map is nuclear.
The following characterisation of nuclear maps is often helpful.
A linear map is nuclear if and only if it is of the form:
where , is an equicontinuous sequence in , and is a sequence in contained in a convex, circled, bounded subset such that is complete.
Now that we have the notion of a nuclear map, we can define a nuclear space.
A LCTVS is nuclear if it has a base of convex circled -neighbourhoods such that for the canonical mapping is nuclear.
Last revised on June 9, 2013 at 12:31:35. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.