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In mathematics, particularly in functional analysis, a bornological space is a type of space which, in some sense, possesses the minimum amount of structure needed to address questions of boundedness of sets and functions, in the same way that a topological space possesses the minimum amount of structure needed to address questions of continuity. Bornological spaces were first studied by Mackey and their name was given by Bourbaki.

Bornological sets

Let X be any set. A bornology on X is a collection B of subsets of X such that

Elements of the collection B are called bounded sets, and the pair (XB) is called a bornological set.

A base of the bornology B is a subset of B such that each element of B is a subset of an element of .

Examples

  • For any set X, the discrete topology of X is a bornology.
  • For any set X, the set of finite (or countably infinite) subsets of X is a bornology.
  • For any topological space X that is T1, the set of subsets of X with compact closure is a bornology.

Bounded maps

If and are two bornologies over the spaces and , respectively, and if is a function, then we say that is a bounded map if it maps -bounded sets in to -bounded sets in . If in addition is a bijection and is also bounded then we say that is a bornological isomorphism.

Examples:

Theorems:

Vector bornologies

If is a vector space over a field K and then a vector bornology on is a bornology B on that is stable under vector addition, scalar multiplication, and the formation of balanced hulls (i.e. if the sum of two bounded sets is bounded, etc.). If in addition B is stable under the formation of convex hulls (i.e. the convex hull of a bounded set is bounded) then B is called a convex vector bornology. And if the only bounded subspace of is the trivial subspace (i.e. the space consisting only of ) then it is called separated. A subset A of B is called bornivorous if it absorbs every bounded set. In a vector bornology, A is bornivorous if it absorbs every bounded balanced set and in a convex vector bornology A is bornivorous if it absorbs every bounded disk.

Bornology of a topological vector space

Every topological vector space gives a bornology on X by defining a subset to be bounded (or von-Neumann bounded), if and only if for all open sets containing zero there exists a with . If is a locally convex topological vector space then is bounded if and only if all continuous semi-norms on are bounded on .

The set of all bounded subsets of is called the bornology or the Von-Neumann bornology of .

Induced topology

Suppose that we start with a vector space and convex vector bornology B on . If we let T denote the collection of all sets that are convex, balanced, and bornivorous then T forms neighborhood basis at 0 for a locally convex topology on that is compatible with the vector space structure of .

Bornological spaces

In functional analysis, a bornological space is a locally convex topological vector space whose topology can be recovered from its bornology in a natural way. Explicitly, a Hausdorff locally convex space with continuous dual is called a bornological space if any one of the following equivalent conditions holds:

where a subset A of is called sequentially open if every sequence converging to 0 eventually belongs to A.

Examples

The following topological vector spaces are all bornological:

  • Any metrisable locally convex space is bornological. In particular, any Fréchet space.
  • Any LF-space (i.e. any locally convex space that is the strict inductive limit of Fréchet spaces).
  • Separated quotients of bornological spaces are bornological.
  • The locally convex direct sum and inductive limit of bornological spaces is bornological.
  • Frechet Montel have a bornological strong dual.

Properties

Banach Disks

Suppose that X is a topological vector space. Then we say that a subset D of X is a disk if it is convex and balanced. The disk D is absorbing in the space span(D) and so its Minkowski functional forms a seminorm on this space, which is denoted by or by . When we give span(D) the topology induced by this seminorm we denote the resulting topological vector space by . A basis of neighborhoods of 0 of this space consists of all sets of the form r D where r ranges over all positive real numbers.

This space is not necessarily Hausdorff as is the case, for instance, if we let and D be the x-axis. However, if D is a bounded disk and if X is Hausdorff then we have that is a norm and so that is a normed space. If D is a bounded sequentially complete disk andX is Hausdorff then the space is in fact a Banach space. And bounded disk in X for which is a Banach space is called a Banach disk, infracomplete, or a bounded completant.

Suppose that X is a locally convex Hausdorff space and that D is a bounded disk in X. Then

Examples

  • Any closed and bounded disk in a Banach space is a Banach disk.

Ultrabornological spaces

A disk in a topological vector space X is called infrabornivorous if it absorbs all Banach disks. If X is locally convex and Hausdorff, then a disk is infrabornivorous if and only if it absorbs all compact disks. A locally convex space is called ultrabornological if any of the following conditions hold:

  • every infrabornivorous disk is a neighborhood of 0,
  • X be the inductive limit of the spaces as D varies over all compact disks in X,
  • A seminorm on X that is bounded on each Banach disk is necessarily continuous,
  • For every locally convex space Y and every linear map , if u is bounded on each Banach disk then u is continuous.
  • For every Banach space Y and every linear map , if u is bounded on each Banach disk then u is continuous.

Properties

  • The finite product of ultrabornological spaces is ultrabornological.
  • Inductive limits of ultrabornological spaces are ultrabornological.

See also

References

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