Strictly singular operator
In functional analysis, a branch of mathematics, a strictly singular operator is a bounded linear operator L from a Banach space X to another Banach space Y, such that it is not an isomorphism, and fails to be an isomorphism[clarification needed] on any infinite dimensional subspace of X. Any compact operator is strictly singular, but not vice versa.[1][2] The class of all strictly singular operators is quite nice in the sense that it forms a norm-closed operator ideal.
Every bounded linear map , for
,
, is strictly singular. Here,
and
are sequence spaces. Similarly, every bounded linear map
and
, for
, is strictly singular. Here
is the Banach space of sequences converging to zero. This is a corollary of Pitt's theorem, which states that such T, for q < p, are compact.
References
- ↑ N.L. Carothers, A Short Course on Banach Space Theory, (2005) London Mathematical Society Student Texts 64, Cambridge University Press.
- ↑ C. J. Read, Strictly singular operators and the invariant subspace problem, Studia Mathematica 132 (3) (1999), 203-226. fulltext
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