Uniform norm explained
In mathematical analysis, the uniform norm (or ) assigns to real- or complex-valued bounded functions defined on a set the non-negative number
\|f\|infty=\|f\|infty,S=\sup\left\{|f(s)|:s\inS\right\}.
This norm is also called the , the , the , or, when the supremum is in fact the maximum, the . The name "uniform norm" derives from the fact that a sequence of functions converges to under the metric derived from the uniform norm if and only if converges to uniformly.[1]
If is a continuous function on a closed and bounded interval, or more generally a compact set, then it is bounded and the supremum in the above definition is attained by the Weierstrass extreme value theorem, so we can replace the supremum by the maximum. In this case, the norm is also called the .In particular, if is some vector such that
x=\left(x1,x2,\ldots,xn\right)
in
finite dimensional coordinate space, it takes the form:
\|x\|infty:=max\left(\left|x1\right|,\ldots,\left|xn\right|\right).
This is called the
-norm.
Definition
Uniform norms are defined, in general, for bounded functions valued in a normed space. Let
be a set and let
be a
normed space. On the set
of functions from
to
, there is an extended norm defined by
\|f\|=\supx\in\|f(x)\|Y\in[0,infty].
This is in general an extended norm since the function
may not be bounded. Restricting this extended norm to the bounded functions (i.e., the functions with finite above extended norm) yields a (finite-valued) norm, called the
uniform norm on
. Note that the definition of uniform norm does not rely on any additional structure on the set
, although in practice
is often at least a
topological space.
The convergence on
in the topology induced by the uniform extended norm is the
uniform convergence, for sequences, and also for
nets and
filters on
.
We can define closed sets and closures of sets with respect to this metric topology; closed sets in the uniform norm are sometimes called uniformly closed and closures uniform closures. The uniform closure of a set of functions A is the space of all functions that can be approximated by a sequence of uniformly-converging functions on
For instance, one restatement of the
Stone–Weierstrass theorem is that the set of all continuous functions on
is the uniform closure of the set of polynomials on
For complex continuous functions over a compact space, this turns it into a C* algebra (cf. Gelfand representation).
Weaker structures inducing the topology of uniform convergence
Uniform metric
See main article: Chebyshev distance. The uniform metric between two bounded functions
from a set
to a
metric space
is defined by
d(f,g)=\supx\indY(f(x),g(x))
The uniform metric is also called the
, after
Pafnuty Chebyshev, who was first to systematically study it. In this case,
is bounded precisely if
is finite for some
constant function
. If we allow unbounded functions, this formula does not yield a norm or metric in a strict sense, although the obtained so-called extended metric still allows one to define a topology on the function space in question; the convergence is then still the
uniform convergence. In particular, a sequence
\left\{fn:n=1,2,3,\ldots\right\}
converges uniformly to a function
if and only if
If
is a
normed space, then it is a
metric space in a natural way. The extended metric on
induced by the uniform extended norm is the same as the uniform extended metric
d(f,g)=\supx\in\|f(x)-g(x)\|Y
on
Uniformity of uniform convergence
See also: Topologies on spaces of linear maps. Let
be a set and let
be a
uniform space. A sequence
of functions from
to
is said to converge uniformly to a function
if for each entourage
there is a natural number
such that,
belongs to
whenever
and
. Similarly for a net. This is a convergence in a topology on
. In fact, the sets
\{(f,g)\colon\forallx\inX\colon(f(x),g(x))\inE\}
where
runs through entourages of
form a fundamental system of entourages of a uniformity on
, called the
uniformity of uniform convergence on
. The uniform convergence is precisely the convergence under its uniform topology.
If
is a
metric space, then it is by default equipped with the metric uniformity. The metric uniformity on
with respect to the uniform extended metric is then the uniformity of uniform convergence on
.
Properties
The set of vectors whose infinity norm is a given constant,
forms the surface of a
hypercube with edge length
The reason for the subscript “
” is that whenever
is continuous and
for some
, then
where
where
is the domain of
; the integral amounts to a sum if
is a
discrete set (see
p-norm).
Notes and References
- Book: Rudin, Walter. Principles of Mathematical Analysis. registration. 1964. McGraw-Hill. New York. 0-07-054235-X. 151.