Difference between revisions of "Countably-normed space"
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− | An example of a countably-normed space is the space of entire functions that are analytic in the unit disc < | + | A locally convex space $ X $ |
+ | whose topology is defined using a countable set of compatible norms $ \| * \| _ {1} \dots \| * \| _ {n} \dots $ | ||
+ | i.e. norms such that if a sequence $ \{ x _ {n} \} \subset X $ | ||
+ | that is fundamental in the norms $ \| * \| _ {p} $ | ||
+ | and $ \| * \| _ {q} $ | ||
+ | converges to zero in one of these norms, then it also converges to zero in the other. The sequence of norms $ \{ \| * \| _ {n} \} $ | ||
+ | can be replaced by a non-decreasing sequence $ \| * \| _ {p} \leq \| * \| _ {q} $, | ||
+ | where $ p < q $, | ||
+ | which generates the same topology with base of neighbourhoods of zero $ U _ {p, \epsilon } = \{ {x \in X } : {\| x \| _ {p} < \epsilon } \} $. | ||
+ | A countably-normed space is metrizable, and its metric $ \rho $ | ||
+ | can be defined by | ||
+ | |||
+ | $$ | ||
+ | \rho ( x, y) = \ | ||
+ | \sum _ {n = 1 } ^ \infty | ||
+ | { | ||
+ | \frac{1}{2 ^ {n} } | ||
+ | } | ||
+ | |||
+ | \frac{\| x - y \| _ {n} }{1 + \| x - y \| _ {n} } | ||
+ | . | ||
+ | $$ | ||
+ | |||
+ | An example of a countably-normed space is the space of entire functions that are analytic in the unit disc $ | z | < 1 $ | ||
+ | with the topology of uniform convergence on any closed subset of this disc and with the collection of norms $ \| x ( z) \| _ {n} = \max _ {| z | \leq 1 - 1 / n } | x ( z) | $. | ||
====References==== | ====References==== | ||
<table><TR><TD valign="top">[1]</TD> <TD valign="top"> I.M. Gel'fand, G.E. Shilov, "Generalized functions" , Acad. Press (1964) (Translated from Russian)</TD></TR></table> | <table><TR><TD valign="top">[1]</TD> <TD valign="top"> I.M. Gel'fand, G.E. Shilov, "Generalized functions" , Acad. Press (1964) (Translated from Russian)</TD></TR></table> |
Latest revision as of 17:31, 5 June 2020
A locally convex space $ X $
whose topology is defined using a countable set of compatible norms $ \| * \| _ {1} \dots \| * \| _ {n} \dots $
i.e. norms such that if a sequence $ \{ x _ {n} \} \subset X $
that is fundamental in the norms $ \| * \| _ {p} $
and $ \| * \| _ {q} $
converges to zero in one of these norms, then it also converges to zero in the other. The sequence of norms $ \{ \| * \| _ {n} \} $
can be replaced by a non-decreasing sequence $ \| * \| _ {p} \leq \| * \| _ {q} $,
where $ p < q $,
which generates the same topology with base of neighbourhoods of zero $ U _ {p, \epsilon } = \{ {x \in X } : {\| x \| _ {p} < \epsilon } \} $.
A countably-normed space is metrizable, and its metric $ \rho $
can be defined by
$$ \rho ( x, y) = \ \sum _ {n = 1 } ^ \infty { \frac{1}{2 ^ {n} } } \frac{\| x - y \| _ {n} }{1 + \| x - y \| _ {n} } . $$
An example of a countably-normed space is the space of entire functions that are analytic in the unit disc $ | z | < 1 $ with the topology of uniform convergence on any closed subset of this disc and with the collection of norms $ \| x ( z) \| _ {n} = \max _ {| z | \leq 1 - 1 / n } | x ( z) | $.
References
[1] | I.M. Gel'fand, G.E. Shilov, "Generalized functions" , Acad. Press (1964) (Translated from Russian) |
Countably-normed space. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Countably-normed_space&oldid=46537