In mathematics, Banach spaces, named after Stefan Banach who studied them, are one of the central objects of study in functional analysis. Many of the infinite-dimensional function spaces studied in functional analysis are examples of Banach spaces.
The familiar Euclidean spaces Kn, where the Euclidean norm of x = (x1, ..., xn) is given by ||x|| = (∑ |xi|2)1/2, are Banach spaces.
The space of all continuous functions f : b → K defined on a closed interval b becomes a Banach space if we define the norm of such a function as ||f|| = sup { |f(x)| : x in b }. This is indeed a norm since continuous functions defined on a closed interval are bounded. The space is complete under this norm, and the resulting Banach space is denoted by Cb. This example can be generalized to the space C(X) of all continuous functions X → K, where X is a compact space, or to the space of all bounded continuous functions X → K, where X is any topological space, or indeed to the space B(X) of all bounded functions X → K, where X is any set. In all these examples, we can multiply functions and stay in the same space: all these examples are in fact unital Banach algebras.
If p ≥ 1 is a real number, we can consider the space of all infinite sequences (x1, x2, x3, ...) of elements in K such that the infinite series ∑i |xi|p is finite. The p-th root of this series' value is then defined to be the p-norm of the sequence. The space, together with this norm, is a Banach space; it is denoted by l p.
The Banach space l∞ consists of all bounded sequences of elements in K; the norm of such a sequence is defined to be the supremum of the absolute values of the sequence's members.
Again, if p ≥ 1 is a real number, we can consider all functions f : b → K such that |f|p is Lebesgue integrable. The p-th root of this integral is then defined to be the norm of f. By itself, this space is not a Banach space because there are non-zero functions whose norm is zero. We define an equivalence relation as follows: f and g are equivalent if and only if the norm of f - g is zero. The set of equivalence classes then forms a Banach space; it is denoted by L pb. It is crucial to use the Lebesgue integral and not the Riemann integral here, because the Riemann integral would not yield a complete space. These examples can be generalized; see L p spaces for details.
If X and Y are two Banach spaces, then we can form their direct sum X ⊕ Y, which is again a Banach space. This construction can be generalized to the direct sum of arbitrarily many Banach spaces.
If M is a closed subspace of the Banach space X, then the quotient space X/M is again a Banach space.
Every inner product gives rise to an associated norm. The inner product space is called a Hilbert space if its associated norm is complete. Thus every Hilbert space is a Banach space by definition. The converse statement also holds under certain conditions; see below.
The space L(V) = L(V, V) even forms a unital Banach algebra; the multiplication operation is given by the composition of linear maps.
Note that the requirement that the maps be continuous is essential; if V is infinite-dimensional, there exist linear maps which are not continuous, and therefore not bounded, so the space V* of linear maps into K is not a Banach space. The space V* (which may be called the algebraic dual space to distinguish it from V
There is a natural map F from V to V
For example, lp is reflexive for 1
but l1 and l∞ are not reflexive. The dual of lp is lq where p and q are related by the formula (1/p) + (1/q) = 1. See L p spaces for details.
The converse is not always true; not every Banach space is a Hilbert space. A necessary and sufficient condition for a Banach space V to be associated to an inner product (which will then necessarily make V into a Hilbert space) is the parallelogram identity:
for all u and v in V, and where ||*|| is the norm on V.
If the norm of a Banach space satisfies this identity, the associated inner product which makes it into a Hilbert space is given by the polarization identity. If V is a real Banach space, then the polarization identity is
whereas if V is a complex Banach space, then the polarization identity is given by
The necessity of this condition follows easily from the properties of an inner product. To see that it is sufficient—that the parallelogram law implies that the form defined by the polarization identity is indeed a complete inner product—one verifies algebraically that this form is additive, whence it follows by induction that the form is linear over the integers and rationals. Then since every real is the limit of some Cauchy sequence of rationals, the completeness of the norm extends the linearity to the whole real line. In the complex case, one can check also that the bilinear form is linear over i in one argument, and conjugate linear in the other.
Banachův prostor | Banach-Raum | Espacio de Banach | Espace de Banach | 바나흐 공간 | Spazio di Banach | מרחב בנך | Banachruimte | バナッハ空間 | Przestrzeń Banacha | Espaço de Banach | Банахово пространство | Banachin avaruus | Banachrum | Банахів простір | 巴拿赫空间
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