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10 votes
2 answers
925 views

Isomorphisms between spaces of test functions and sequence spaces

I am in the process of writing some self-contained notes on probability theory in spaces of distributions, for the purposes of statistical mechanics and quantum field theory. Perhaps the simplest ...
Abdelmalek Abdesselam's user avatar
17 votes
3 answers
3k views

Why is multiplication on the space of smooth functions with compact support continuous?

I asked the question Why is multiplication on the space of smooth functions with compact support continuous? on M.SE sometime ago but I didn't receive a satisfactory answer. I was reading this ...
Hugo's user avatar
  • 394
15 votes
1 answer
2k views

Bases for spaces of smooth functions

Let $S$ denote the space of rapidly decreasing sequences, which means sequences $a=(a_k)_{k=1}^\infty$ such that the numbers $p_d(a)=\sup\{k^d|a_k| : 1\leq k<\infty\}$ are finite for all $d\in\...
Neil Strickland's user avatar
11 votes
1 answer
258 views

Bilinear product of two summable families

Consider the following statement, which I suspect is false as written: Let $E,F,G$ be (Hausdorff) topological vector spaces (over $\mathbb{R}$), let $\varphi\colon E\times F\to G$ be continuous and ...
Gro-Tsen's user avatar
  • 32.5k
7 votes
1 answer
754 views

Closed convex hull in infinite dimensions vs. continuous convex combinations

tl;dr: When is the closed convex hull of a set $K$ equal to the set of "continuous" convex combinations of $K$? I am essentially asking for the most general, infinite-dimensional analogue of ...
user163625's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
182 views

Tensor product of a slowly increasing smooth function and a tempered distribution converging to a co-located product

Let $T$ be a tempered distribution on $\mathbb{R}$ and $g$ be a smooth function on $\mathbb{R}$ whose derivatives of all orders are all polynomially bounded (a.k.a. slowly increasing). For any pair of ...
Isaac's user avatar
  • 3,477
21 votes
3 answers
3k views

Can you tell whether a space is Banach from the unit ball?

Let $V$ be a real vector space. It is well known that a subset $B\subset V$ is the unit ball for some norm on $V$ if and only if $B$ satisfies the following conditions: $B$ is convex, i.e. if $v,w\...
Jim Belk's user avatar
  • 8,493
14 votes
0 answers
860 views

strong topologies on $C_c^\infty$

UPDATE (27/08/2020): I realized after a comment from Jochen Wengenroth that there was at least one false premise behind my question, owing to the fact that analysts sometimes use the words "...
Chris Wendl's user avatar
12 votes
1 answer
908 views

Equivalence of σ-convex hull and closed convex hull

Let $X$ be a locally convex topological space, and let $K \subset X$ be a compact set. Recalling that the standard convex hull is defined as $$\text{co}(K) = \Big\{ \sum_{i=1}^n a_i x_i : a_i \geq 0,\,...
Gregory D.'s user avatar
8 votes
4 answers
811 views

Schwartz space of functions with values in a Frechet space

While reading some papers about $\psi$DOs I found some spaces of vector valued functions which I am not familiar with. I am looking for references about the Schwartz space of functions with values in ...
Coffee's user avatar
  • 601
8 votes
2 answers
385 views

Metrizability of a topological vector space where every sequence can be made to converge to zero

This is a follow-up to this answer. If $E$ is a (real or complex) topological vector space, we say that a sequence $\{x_n\}_{n=1}^\infty$ in $E$ can be made to converge to zero if there exists a ...
J. van Dobben de Bruyn's user avatar
7 votes
1 answer
209 views

$GL_1(\mathcal{E}'(\mathbb{R}))$ open in $\mathcal{E}'(\mathbb{R})$?

Let $\mathcal{E}'(\mathbb{R})$ be algebra of all compactly supported distributions on $\mathbb{R}$, equipped with the strong dual topology $\beta(\mathcal{E}',\mathcal{E})$, and with the usual ...
Giulia's user avatar
  • 73
6 votes
1 answer
455 views

Is the tensor product of distributions a continuous bilinear map with respect to the weak topology?

Let $X$ and $Y$ be smooth manifolds. The map $\mathcal{D}'(X)\times\mathcal{D}'(Y)\to\mathcal{D}'(X\times Y)$ given by $(S,T)\mapsto S\boxtimes T$ is continuous with respect to the strong topology. Is ...
user449595's user avatar
6 votes
1 answer
1k views

Under what conditions does a continuous linear map map a closed subspace to a closed subspace?

Are there natural conditions that ensure that a continuous linear map $\phi:V\to W$ between TVS maps any closed subspace $L\subset V$ to a closed subspace in $W$? It is obviously satisfied if $W$ is ...
Rami's user avatar
  • 2,639
5 votes
3 answers
510 views

What is the definition of being smooth for a function from a Lie group to a Fréchet space?

In representation theory of real groups, one is confronted with the notion of smoothness for functions defined on a Lie group with values in a Fréchet space (e.g. see Wallach's Real Reductive Groups I,...
Murat Güngör's user avatar
5 votes
2 answers
673 views

When are the closed convex subsets countable intersections of halfspaces

For what kind of topological vector spaces (separable maybe?) are the closed convex subsets countable intersections of halfspaces. I've seen somewhere that it's true for separable Hilbert spaces, ...
LCO's user avatar
  • 506
4 votes
4 answers
796 views

On Köthe sequence spaces

I asked this a week ago at math.stackexchange, but without success. As far as I understand, there are several meanings of the notion of the Köthe sequence space, in particular, Hans Jarchow in his "...
Sergei Akbarov's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
520 views

Compactly generated Banach spaces

Suppose that $X$ is a Banach space (or more generally, Frechet space) such that $X$ is the closure of the span of a compact (in the original topology) subset $K$. Do we know anything "nice" about $X$, ...
Iian Smythe's user avatar
  • 3,115
3 votes
1 answer
475 views

Strict topology on the multiplier algebra

Let $A$ be a $C^*$-algebra. Let $M(A)$ be its multiplier $C^*$-algebras. The strict topology on $M(A)$ is given by $$x_\lambda \to x \iff \forall a\in A: (\|x_\lambda a-xa\| + \|ax_\lambda - ax\| \to ...
Andromeda's user avatar
  • 175
2 votes
1 answer
453 views

Weak convergence of probability measures on weak versus strong dual

The space of temperate distributions $S'(\mathbb{R}^d)$ is often equipped with the weak-$\ast$ or with the strong topology. When defining the notion of a probability measure on $S'(\mathbb{R}^d)$, ...
Abdelmalek Abdesselam's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
113 views

The Fourier projection mappings $\{ P_N \}$ form an equicontinuous family of linear maps on $E'(S^1)$ as well?

Let $S^1=\mathbb{R}/\mathbb{Z}$ and define the Fourier projection operator $P_N$ for each $N \in \mathbb{N}$ as \begin{equation} P_N(f)=\sum_{n=-N}^N \langle f, e_n \rangle_{L^2} e_n \end{equation} ...
Isaac's user avatar
  • 3,477
1 vote
1 answer
189 views

Complemented subspaces in a dual Banach space

Let $Y$ be a complemented subspace in a dual Banach space $X$. Is it true that $Y$ is itself isomorphic to a dual? This is the case of a $w^*$-closed subspace $Y$, but a complemented subspace of $X^*...
Pietro Majer's user avatar
  • 60.5k
1 vote
1 answer
220 views

Criterion of reflexivity

Let $E$ be a Banach space. It is known that if for any equivalent norm on $E^*$ the closed unit ball of $E^*$ is weakly* closed, then $E$ is reflexive (a very short proof is in the book by Fabian, ...
erz's user avatar
  • 5,529
1 vote
1 answer
998 views

Subspaces of Quotient Spaces

Let $X$ be a topological vector space (not necessarily Hausdorff), with topology $\tau$, and $M, N$ linear subspaces of $X$. Let $\pi:X \rightarrow X/N$ be the quotient map, which associates to each $...
Maurizio Barbato's user avatar