Difference between revisions of "Boundedly-compact set"
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Revision as of 17:02, 17 October 2014
in a topological linear space $X$
A set $M$ with the property that the closure $\bar N$ of every bounded subset $N \subset M$ is compact and is contained in $M$ (for a normed space in the strong (resp. weak) topology this is equivalent to the compactness (resp. weak compactness) of the intersections of $M$ with balls). A convex closed set in a normed space is boundedly compact if and only if it is locally compact. Boundedly-compact sets have applications in the theory of approximation in Banach spaces; they have the property that an element of best approximation exists. A barrelled topological linear space which is boundedly compact (in itself) in the weak (resp. strong) topology is a reflexive (resp. Montel) space. A normed space which is boundedly compact is finite-dimensional.
References
[1] | V.L. Klee, "Convex bodies and periodic homeomorphisms in Hilbert space" Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. , 74 (1953) pp. 10–43 |
[2] | R.E. Edwards, "Functional analysis: theory and applications" , Holt, Rinehart & Winston (1965) |
Boundedly-compact set. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Boundedly-compact_set&oldid=33716