Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9516886 | Topology and its Applications | 2005 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
We prove that certain (“basis separating”) linear injections are automatically continuous. We discuss openness of such maps in Section 5. There are two stages to the proof of continuity: (1) An injective basis separating map can be written in a canonical form (Theorem 4.3). (2) Any map of this form is continuous (Theorem 4.4). Given Banach spaces X and Y with Schauder bases {xn} and {yn}, respectively, we say that H:XâY, H(ânâNx(n)xn)=ânâNHx(n)yn, is basis separating if for all elements x=ânâNx(n)xn and y=ânâNy(n)xn of X, x(n)y(n)=0 for all nâN implies that Hx(n)Hy(n)=0 for all nâN. Associated with any linear basis separating map H, there is a support maph:NâNâ that we discuss in Section 3. The support map enables us to develop the canonical form (Eq. (3.2)) for basis separating maps.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Mathematics
Geometry and Topology
Authors
Edward Beckenstein, Lawrence Narici,