Approximation property

In mathematics, a Banach space is said to have the approximation property (AP), if every compact operator is a limit of finite-rank operators. The converse is always true.
Every Hilbert space has this property. There are, however, Banach spaces which do not; Per Enflo published the first counterexample in a 1973 article. However, a lot of work in this area was done by Grothendieck (1955).
Later many other counterexamples were found. The space of bounded operators on does not have the approximation property (Szankowski). The spaces
for
and
(see Sequence space) have closed subspaces that do not have the approximation property.
Definition
A locally convex topological vector space is said to have the approximation property, if the identity map can be approximated, uniformly on precompact sets, by continuous linear maps of finite rank.[2] If X is a Banach space the this requirement becomes that for every compact set
and every
, there is an operator
of finite rank so that
, for every
.
Some other flavours of the AP are studied:
Let be a Banach space and let
. We say that X has the
-approximation property (
-AP), if, for every compact set
and every
, there is an operator
of finite rank so that
, for every
, and
.
A Banach space is said to have bounded approximation property (BAP), if it has the -AP for some
.
A Banach space is said to have metric approximation property (MAP), if it is 1-AP.
A Banach space is said to have compact approximation property (CAP), if in the definition of AP an operator of finite rank is replaced with a compact operator.
Examples
- Every projective limit of Hilbert spaces, as well as any subspace of such a projective limit, possesses the approximation property.[3]
- Hence every nuclear space possesses the approximation property.
- Every subspace of an arbitrary product of Hilbert spaces possesses the approximation property.[4]
- Every separable Frechet space that contains a Schauder basis possesses the approximation property.[5]
- Every space with a Schauder basis has the AP (we can use the projections associated to the base as the
's in the definition), thus a lot of spaces with the AP can be found. For example, the
spaces, or the symmetric Tsirelson space.
References
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- Enflo, P.: A counterexample to the approximation property in Banach spaces. Acta Math. 130, 309–317(1973).
- Grothendieck, A.: Produits tensoriels topologiques et espaces nucleaires. Memo. Amer. Math. Soc. 16 (1955).
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- Paul R. Halmos, "Has progress in mathematics slowed down?" Amer. Math. Monthly 97 (1990), no. 7, 561—588. MR 1066321
- William B. Johnson "Complementably universal separable Banach spaces" in Robert G. Bartle (ed.), 1980 Studies in functional analysis, Mathematical Association of America.
- Kwapień, S. "On Enflo's example of a Banach space without the approximation property". Séminaire Goulaouic–Schwartz 1972—1973: Équations aux dérivées partielles et analyse fonctionnelle, Exp. No. 8, 9 pp. Centre de Math., École Polytech., Paris, 1973. MR 407569
- Lindenstrauss, J.; Tzafriri, L.: Classical Banach Spaces I, Sequence spaces, 1977.
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- Karen Saxe, Beginning Functional Analysis, Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics, 2002 Springer-Verlag, New York.
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- Singer, Ivan. Bases in Banach spaces. II. Editura Academiei Republicii Socialiste România, Bucharest; Springer-Verlag, Berlin-New York, 1981. viii+880 pp. ISBN 3-540-10394-5. MR 610799