Subspaces isomorphic to C[0,omega_1] - MathOverflow most recent 30 from http://mathoverflow.net 2013-05-19T06:28:16Z http://mathoverflow.net/feeds/question/65250 http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdf http://mathoverflow.net/questions/65250/subspaces-isomorphic-to-c0-omega-1 Subspaces isomorphic to C[0,omega_1] Tomek Kania 2011-05-17T15:26:08Z 2011-05-17T21:36:52Z <p>Let $\omega_1$ be smallest uncountable ordinal. I am trying to understand the possible "large" subspaces of $C[0,\omega_1]$, namely those which are isomorphic to the whole space. Therefore I have the followin question:</p> <p>Does every subspace of $C[0,\omega_1]$ isomorphic to $C[0,\omega_1]$ contain a complemented copy isomorphic to itself? The only (complemented) examples that I can "construct by hand", excluding the finite-codimensional ones, are of the form</p> <p>$\mbox{cl lin}(\mathbf{1}_{[0,\gamma{\sigma}]}\colon \sigma\leq \omega_1)$</p> <p>where $(\gamma_\sigma)_{\sigma&lt;\omega_1}$ is increasing long sequence of limit ordinals and $\sigma_{\omega_1}=\omega_1$ (note that the family $({\mathbf{1}_{[0,\alpha]}\colon \alpha\leq \omega_1})$ forms the long Schauder basis for $C[0,\omega_1]$).</p> <p>Thank you, T.</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/65250/subspaces-isomorphic-to-c0-omega-1/65259#65259 Answer by Bill Johnson for Subspaces isomorphic to C[0,omega_1] Bill Johnson 2011-05-17T17:29:58Z 2011-05-17T17:29:58Z <p>Have you searched the literature? There are a large number of papers about uncomplemented and complemented embeddings of $C(K)$ into $C(K)$. In particular, you should look at papers of Bessaga and Pelczynski from the 1960s (especially their fourth one on spaces of continuous functions), papers of Dan Amir from the late 1960s and 1970s, and Alspach and Benyamini from the 1970s. For an overview of part of the material, read Rosenthal's article in volume 2 of the Handbook of the Geometry of Banach Spaces. In particular, in Section 3C of that article you will find that there is an isomorphic copy of $C[0,\omega^\omega]$ in itself that is not complemented; from that it is very easy to prove that there is an isomorphic copy of $C[0,\omega_1]$ in itself that is not complemented. </p>