Bornological space explained
In mathematics, particularly in functional analysis, a bornological space is a type of space which, in some sense, possesses the minimum amount of structure needed to address questions of boundedness of sets and linear maps, in the same way that a topological space possesses the minimum amount of structure needed to address questions of continuity. Bornological spaces are distinguished by the property that a linear map from a bornological space into any locally convex spaces is continuous if and only if it is a bounded linear operator.
Bornological spaces were first studied by George Mackey. The name was coined by Bourbaki after, the French word for "bounded".
Bornologies and bounded maps
See main article: Bornology.
A on a set
is a collection
of subsets of
that satisfy all the following conditions:
-
covers
that is,
;
-
is stable under inclusions; that is, if
and
then
;
-
is stable under finite unions; that is, if
then
;
Elements of the collection
are called
or simply
if
is understood. The pair
is called a
or a
.
A or of a bornology
is a subset
of
such that each element of
is a subset of some element of
Given a collection
of subsets of
the smallest bornology containing
is called the
If
and
are bornological sets then their
on
is the bornology having as a base the collection of all sets of the form
where
and
A subset of
is bounded in the product bornology if and only if its image under the canonical projections onto
and
are both bounded.
Bounded maps
If
and
are bornological sets then a function
is said to be a
or a
(with respect to these bornologies) if it maps
-bounded subsets of
to
-bounded subsets of
that is, if
If in addition
is a bijection and
is also bounded then
is called a
.
Vector bornologies
See main article: Vector bornology.
Let
be a vector space over a
field
where
has a bornology
A bornology
on
is called a
if it is stable under vector addition, scalar multiplication, and the formation of balanced hulls (i.e. if the sum of two bounded sets is bounded, etc.).
If
is a
topological vector space (TVS) and
is a bornology on
then the following are equivalent:
-
is a vector bornology;
- Finite sums and balanced hulls of
-bounded sets are
-bounded;
- The scalar multiplication map
defined by
and the addition map
defined by
are both bounded when their domains carry their product bornologies (i.e. they map bounded subsets to bounded subsets).
A vector bornology
is called a if it is stable under the formation of
convex hulls (i.e. the convex hull of a bounded set is bounded) then
And a vector bornology
is called if the only bounded vector subspace of
is the 0-dimensional trivial space
Usually,
is either the real or complex numbers, in which case a vector bornology
on
will be called a
if
has a base consisting of
convex sets.
Bornivorous subsets
A subset
of
is called
and a
if it
absorbs every bounded set.
In a vector bornology,
is bornivorous if it absorbs every bounded balanced set and in a convex vector bornology
is bornivorous if it absorbs every bounded disk.
Two TVS topologies on the same vector space have that same bounded subsets if and only if they have the same bornivores.
Every bornivorous subset of a locally convex metrizable topological vector space is a neighborhood of the origin.
Mackey convergence
A sequence
in a TVS
is said to be if there exists a sequence of positive real numbers
diverging to
such that
converges to
in
Bornology of a topological vector space
at least on a non discrete
valued field gives a bornology on
by defining a subset
to be
bounded (or von-Neumann bounded), if and only if for all open sets
containing zero there exists a
with
If
is a
locally convex topological vector space then
is bounded if and only if all continuous semi-norms on
are bounded on
The set of all bounded subsets of a topological vector space
is called
or
of
If
is a
locally convex topological vector space, then an
absorbing disk
in
is bornivorous (resp. infrabornivorous) if and only if its
Minkowski functional is locally bounded (resp. infrabounded).
Induced topology
If
is a convex vector bornology on a vector space
then the collection
}(0) of all convex
balanced subsets of
that are bornivorous forms a neighborhood basis at the origin for a
locally convex topology on
called the
.
If
is a TVS then the
is the vector space
endowed with the locally convex topology induced by the von Neumann bornology of
Quasi-bornological spaces
Quasi-bornological spaces where introduced by S. Iyahen in 1968.
A topological vector space (TVS)
with a continuous dual
is called a
if any of the following equivalent conditions holds:
- Every bounded linear operator from
into another TVS is continuous.
- Every bounded linear operator from
into a complete metrizable TVS is continuous.
- Every knot in a bornivorous string is a neighborhood of the origin.
Every pseudometrizable TVS is quasi-bornological. A TVS
in which every
bornivorous set is a neighborhood of the origin is a quasi-bornological space. If
is a quasi-bornological TVS then the finest locally convex topology on
that is coarser than
makes
into a locally convex bornological space.
Bornological space
In functional analysis, a locally convex topological vector space is a bornological space if its topology can be recovered from its bornology in a natural way.
Every locally convex quasi-bornological space is bornological but there exist bornological spaces that are quasi-bornological.
A topological vector space (TVS)
with a continuous dual
is called a
if it is locally convex and any of the following equivalent conditions holds:
- Every convex, balanced, and bornivorous set in
is a neighborhood of zero.
- Every bounded linear operator from
into a locally convex TVS is continuous.
- Recall that a linear map is bounded if and only if it maps any sequence converging to
in the domain to a bounded subset of the codomain. In particular, any linear map that is sequentially continuous at the origin is bounded. - Every bounded linear operator from
into a seminormed space is continuous.
- Every bounded linear operator from
into a Banach space is continuous.
If
is a
Hausdorff locally convex space then we may add to this list:
- The locally convex topology induced by the von Neumann bornology on
is the same as
's given topology.
- Every bounded seminorm on
is continuous.
- Any other Hausdorff locally convex topological vector space topology on
that has the same (von Neumann) bornology as
is necessarily coarser than
-
is the inductive limit of normed spaces.
-
is the inductive limit of the normed spaces
as
varies over the closed and bounded disks of
(or as
varies over the bounded disks of
).
-
carries the Mackey topology
and all bounded linear functionals on
are continuous.
-
has both of the following properties:
is or , which means that every convex sequentially open subset of
is open,
is or , which means that every convex and bornivorous subset of
is sequentially open.where a subset
of
is called if every sequence converging to
eventually belongs to
Every sequentially continuous linear operator from a locally convex bornological space into a locally convex TVS is continuous, where recall that a linear operator is sequentially continuous if and only if it is sequentially continuous at the origin. Thus for linear maps from a bornological space into a locally convex space, continuity is equivalent to sequential continuity at the origin. More generally, we even have the following:
- Any linear map
from a locally convex bornological space into a locally convex space
that maps null sequences in
to bounded subsets of
is necessarily continuous.
Sufficient conditions
As a consequent of the Mackey–Ulam theorem, "for all practical purposes, the product of bornological spaces is bornological."
The following topological vector spaces are all bornological:
Any strict inductive limit of bornological spaces, in particular any strict LF-space, is bornological.
- This shows that there are bornological spaces that are not metrizable.
A countable product of locally convex bornological spaces is bornological.Quotients of Hausdorff locally convex bornological spaces are bornological.The direct sum and inductive limit of Hausdorff locally convex bornological spaces is bornological.Fréchet Montel spaces have bornological strong duals.The strong dual of every reflexive Fréchet space is bornological.If the strong dual of a metrizable locally convex space is separable, then it is bornological.A vector subspace of a Hausdorff locally convex bornological space
that has finite codimension in
is bornological.The finest locally convex topology on a vector space is bornological.
- Counterexamples
There exists a bornological LB-space whose strong bidual is bornological.
A closed vector subspace of a locally convex bornological space is not necessarily bornological. There exists a closed vector subspace of a locally convex bornological space that is complete (and so sequentially complete) but neither barrelled nor bornological.
Bornological spaces need not be barrelled and barrelled spaces need not be bornological. Because every locally convex ultrabornological space is barrelled, it follows that a bornological space is not necessarily ultrabornological.
Properties
The finite product of locally convex ultrabornological spaces is ultrabornological.Every Hausdorff bornological space is quasi-barrelled.Given a bornological space
with continuous dual
the topology of
coincides with the Mackey topology
Every quasi-complete (i.e. all closed and bounded subsets are complete) bornological space is barrelled. There exist, however, bornological spaces that are not barrelled.Every bornological space is the inductive limit of normed spaces (and Banach spaces if the space is also quasi-complete).Let
be a metrizable locally convex space with continuous dual
Then the following are equivalent:-
is bornological.
-
is quasi-barrelled.
-
is barrelled.
-
is a distinguished space.
If
is a linear map between locally convex spaces and if
is bornological, then the following are equivalent:-
is continuous.
-
is sequentially continuous.
- For every set
that's bounded in
is bounded.
- If
is a null sequence in
then
is a null sequence in
- If
is a Mackey convergent null sequence in
then
is a bounded subset of
Suppose that
and
are locally convex TVSs and that the space of continuous linear maps
is endowed with the topology of uniform convergence on bounded subsets of
If
is a bornological space and if
is complete then
is a complete TVS.- In particular, the strong dual of a locally convex bornological space is complete. However, it need not be bornological.
- Subsets
- In a locally convex bornological space, every convex bornivorous set
is a neighborhood of
(
is required to be a disk).
- Every bornivorous subset of a locally convex metrizable topological vector space is a neighborhood of the origin.
- Closed vector subspaces of bornological space need not be bornological.
Ultrabornological spaces
See main article: Ultrabornological space.
A disk in a topological vector space
is called
if it absorbs all
Banach disks.
If
is locally convex and Hausdorff, then a disk is infrabornivorous if and only if it absorbs all compact disks.
A locally convex space is called if any of the following equivalent conditions hold:
- Every infrabornivorous disk is a neighborhood of the origin.
-
is the inductive limit of the spaces
as
varies over all compact disks in
- A seminorm on
that is bounded on each Banach disk is necessarily continuous.
- For every locally convex space
and every linear map
if
is bounded on each Banach disk then
is continuous.
- For every Banach space
and every linear map
if
is bounded on each Banach disk then
is continuous.
Properties
The finite product of ultrabornological spaces is ultrabornological. Inductive limits of ultrabornological spaces are ultrabornological.
Bibliography
- Book: Hogbe-Nlend, Henri. Bornologies and functional analysis. North-Holland Publishing Co.. Amsterdam. 1977. xii+144. 0-7204-0712-5. 0500064.
- Book: Kriegl. Andreas. Michor. Peter W.. The Convenient Setting of Global Analysis. 1997. American Mathematical Society. Mathematical Surveys and Monographs. 9780821807804.