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Injective tensor product

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In functional analysis, an area of mathematics, the injective tensor product is a particular topological tensor product, a topological vector space (TVS) formed by equipping the tensor product of the underlying vector spaces of two TVSs with a compatible topology. It was introduced by Alexander Grothendieck and used by him to define nuclear spaces. Injective tensor products have applications outside of nuclear spaces: as described below, many constructions of TVSs, and in particular Banach spaces, as spaces of functions or sequences amount to injective tensor products of simpler spaces.

Definition

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Let X {\displaystyle X} and Y {\displaystyle Y} be locally convex topological vector spaces over C {\displaystyle \mathbb {C} } , with continuous dual spaces X ' {\displaystyle X^{\prime }} and Y ' . {\displaystyle Y^{\prime }.} A subscript s {\displaystyle \sigma } as in X s ' {\displaystyle X_{\sigma }^{\prime }} denotes the weak-* topology. Although written in terms of complex TVSs, results described generally also apply to the real case.

The vector space B ( X s ' , Y s ' ) {\displaystyle B\left(X_{\sigma }^{\prime },Y_{\sigma }^{\prime }\right)} of continuous bilinear functionals X s ' x Y s ' - C {\displaystyle X_{\sigma }^{\prime }\times Y_{\sigma }^{\prime }\to \mathbb {C} } is isomorphic to the (vector space) tensor product X Y {\displaystyle X\otimes Y} , as follows. For each simple tensor x y {\displaystyle x\otimes y} in X Y {\displaystyle X\otimes Y} , there is a bilinear map f B ( X s ' , Y s ' ) {\displaystyle f\in B\left(X_{\sigma }^{\prime },Y_{\sigma }^{\prime }\right)} , given by f ( ph , ps ) = ph ( x ) ps ( y ) {\displaystyle f(\varphi ,\psi )=\varphi (x)\psi (y)} . It can be shown that the map x y - f {\displaystyle x\otimes y\mapsto f} , extended linearly to X Y {\displaystyle X\otimes Y} , is an isomorphism.

Let X b ' , Y b ' {\displaystyle X_{b}^{\prime },Y_{b}^{\prime }} denote the respective dual spaces with the topology of bounded convergence. If Z {\displaystyle Z} is a locally convex topological vector space, then B ( X s ' , Y s ' ; Z ) B ( X b ' , Y b ' ; Z ) {\textstyle B\left(X_{\sigma }^{\prime },Y_{\sigma }^{\prime };Z\right)~\subseteq ~B\left(X_{b}^{\prime },Y_{b}^{\prime };Z\right)} . The topology of the injective tensor product is the topology induced from a certain topology on B ( X b ' , Y b ' ; Z ) {\displaystyle B\left(X_{b}^{\prime },Y_{b}^{\prime };Z\right)} , whose basic open sets are constructed as follows. For any equicontinuous subsets G X ' {\displaystyle G\subseteq X^{\prime }} and H Y ' {\displaystyle H\subseteq Y^{\prime }} , and any neighborhood N {\displaystyle N} in Z {\displaystyle Z} , define U ( G , H , N ) = { b B ( X b ' , Y b ' ; Z ) : b ( G x H ) N } {\displaystyle {\mathcal {U}}(G,H,N)=\left\{b\in B\left(X_{b}^{\prime },Y_{b}^{\prime };Z\right)~:~b(G\times H)\subseteq N\right\}} where every set b ( G x H ) {\displaystyle b(G\times H)} is bounded in Z , {\displaystyle Z,} which is necessary and sufficient for the collection of all U ( G , H , N ) {\displaystyle {\mathcal {U}}(G,H,N)} to form a locally convex TVS topology on B ( X b ' , Y b ' ; Z ) . {\displaystyle {\mathcal {B}}\left(X_{b}^{\prime },Y_{b}^{\prime };Z\right).} [1][clarification needed] This topology is called the e {\displaystyle \varepsilon } -topology or injective topology. In the special case where Z = C {\displaystyle Z=\mathbb {C} } is the underlying scalar field, B ( X s ' , Y s ' ) {\displaystyle B\left(X_{\sigma }^{\prime },Y_{\sigma }^{\prime }\right)} is the tensor product X Y {\displaystyle X\otimes Y} as above, and the topological vector space consisting of X Y {\displaystyle X\otimes Y} with the e {\displaystyle \varepsilon } -topology is denoted by X e Y {\displaystyle X\otimes _{\varepsilon }Y} , and is not necessarily complete; its completion is the injective tensor product of X {\displaystyle X} and Y {\displaystyle Y} and denoted by X ^ e Y {\displaystyle X{\widehat {\otimes }}_{\varepsilon }Y} .

If X {\displaystyle X} and Y {\displaystyle Y} are normed spaces then X e Y {\displaystyle X\otimes _{\varepsilon }Y} is normable. If X {\displaystyle X} and Y {\displaystyle Y} are Banach spaces, then X ^ e Y {\displaystyle X{\widehat {\otimes }}_{\varepsilon }Y} is also. Its norm can be expressed in terms of the (continuous) duals of X {\displaystyle X} and Y {\displaystyle Y} . Denoting the unit balls of the dual spaces X * {\displaystyle X^{*}} and Y * {\displaystyle Y^{*}} by B X * {\displaystyle B_{X^{*}}} and B Y * {\displaystyle B_{Y^{*}}} , the injective norm || u || e {\displaystyle \|u\|_{\varepsilon }} of an element u X Y {\displaystyle u\in X\otimes Y} is defined as || u || e = sup { | i ph ( x i ) ps ( y i ) | : ph B X * , ps B Y * } {\displaystyle \|u\|_{\varepsilon }=\sup {\big \{}{\big |}\sum _{i}\varphi (x_{i})\psi (y_{i}){\big |}:\varphi \in B_{X^{*}},\psi \in B_{Y^{*}}{\big \}}} where the supremum is taken over all expressions u = i x i y i {\displaystyle u=\sum _{i}x_{i}\otimes y_{i}} . Then the completion of X Y {\displaystyle X\otimes Y} under the injective norm is isomorphic as a topological vector space to X ^ e Y {\displaystyle X{\widehat {\otimes }}_{\varepsilon }Y} .[2]

Basic properties

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The map ( x , y ) - x y : X x Y - X e Y {\displaystyle (x,y)\mapsto x\otimes y:X\times Y\to X\otimes _{\varepsilon }Y} is continuous.[3]

Suppose that u : X 1 - Y 1 {\displaystyle u:X_{1}\to Y_{1}} and v : X 2 - Y 2 {\displaystyle v:X_{2}\to Y_{2}} are two linear maps between locally convex spaces. If both u {\displaystyle u} and v {\displaystyle v} are continuous then so is their tensor product u v : X 1 e X 2 - Y 1 e Y 2 {\displaystyle u\otimes v:X_{1}\otimes _{\varepsilon }X_{2}\to Y_{1}\otimes _{\varepsilon }Y_{2}} . Moreover:

  • If u {\displaystyle u} and v {\displaystyle v} are both TVS-embeddings then so is u ^ e v : X 1 ^ e X 2 - Y 1 ^ e Y 2 . {\displaystyle u{\widehat {\otimes }}_{\varepsilon }v:X_{1}{\widehat {\otimes }}_{\varepsilon }X_{2}\to Y_{1}{\widehat {\otimes }}_{\varepsilon }Y_{2}.}
  • If X 1 {\displaystyle X_{1}} (resp. Y 1 {\displaystyle Y_{1}} ) is a linear subspace of X 2 {\displaystyle X_{2}} (resp. Y 2 {\displaystyle Y_{2}} ) then X 1 e Y 1 {\displaystyle X_{1}\otimes _{\varepsilon }Y_{1}} is canonically isomorphic to a linear subspace of X 2 e Y 2 {\displaystyle X_{2}\otimes _{\varepsilon }Y_{2}} and X 1 ^ e Y 1 {\displaystyle X_{1}{\widehat {\otimes }}_{\varepsilon }Y_{1}} is canonically isomorphic to a linear subspace of X 2 ^ e Y 2 . {\displaystyle X_{2}{\widehat {\otimes }}_{\varepsilon }Y_{2}.}
  • There are examples of u {\displaystyle u} and v {\displaystyle v} such that both u {\displaystyle u} and v {\displaystyle v} are surjective homomorphisms but u ^ e v : X 1 ^ e X 2 - Y 1 ^ e Y 2 {\displaystyle u{\widehat {\otimes }}_{\varepsilon }v:X_{1}{\widehat {\otimes }}_{\varepsilon }X_{2}\to Y_{1}{\widehat {\otimes }}_{\varepsilon }Y_{2}} is not a homomorphism.
  • If all four spaces are normed then || u v || e = || u || || v || . {\displaystyle \|u\otimes v\|_{\varepsilon }=\|u\|\|v\|.} [4]

Relation to projective tensor product

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The projective topology or the p {\displaystyle \pi } -topology is the finest locally convex topology on B ( X s ' , Y s ' ) = X Y {\displaystyle B\left(X_{\sigma }^{\prime },Y_{\sigma }^{\prime }\right)=X\otimes Y} that makes continuous the canonical map X x Y - X Y {\displaystyle X\times Y\to X\otimes Y} defined by sending ( x , y ) X x Y {\displaystyle (x,y)\in X\times Y} to the bilinear form x y . {\displaystyle x\otimes y.} When X Y {\displaystyle X\otimes Y} is endowed with this topology then it will be denoted by X p Y {\displaystyle X\otimes _{\pi }Y} and called the projective tensor product of X {\displaystyle X} and Y . {\displaystyle Y.}

The injective topology is always coarser than the projective topology, which is in turn coarser than the inductive topology (the finest locally convex TVS topology making X x Y - X Y {\displaystyle X\times Y\to X\otimes Y} separately continuous).

The space X e Y {\displaystyle X\otimes _{\varepsilon }Y} is Hausdorff if and only if both X {\displaystyle X} and Y {\displaystyle Y} are Hausdorff. If X {\displaystyle X} and Y {\displaystyle Y} are normed then || th || e <= || th || p {\displaystyle \|\theta \|_{\varepsilon }\leq \|\theta \|_{\pi }} for all th X Y {\displaystyle \theta \in X\otimes Y} , where || || p {\displaystyle \|\cdot \|_{\pi }} is the projective norm.[5]

The injective and projective topologies both figure in Grothendieck's definition of nuclear spaces.[6]

Duals of injective tensor products

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The continuous dual space of X e Y {\displaystyle X\otimes _{\varepsilon }Y} is a vector subspace of B ( X , Y ) {\displaystyle B(X,Y)} , denoted by J ( X , Y ) . {\displaystyle J(X,Y).} The elements of J ( X , Y ) {\displaystyle J(X,Y)} are called integral forms on X x Y {\displaystyle X\times Y} , a term justified by the following fact.

The dual J ( X , Y ) {\displaystyle J(X,Y)} of X ^ e Y {\displaystyle X{\widehat {\otimes }}_{\varepsilon }Y} consists of exactly those continuous bilinear forms v {\displaystyle v} on X x Y {\displaystyle X\times Y} for which v ( x , y ) = S x T ph ( x ) ps ( y ) d m ( ph , ps ) {\displaystyle v(x,y)=\int _{S\times T}\varphi (x)\psi (y)\,d\mu (\varphi ,\psi )} for some closed, equicontinuous subsets S {\displaystyle S} and T {\displaystyle T} of X s ' {\displaystyle X_{\sigma }^{\prime }} and Y s ' , {\displaystyle Y_{\sigma }^{\prime },} respectively, and some Radon measure m {\displaystyle \mu } on the compact set S x T {\displaystyle S\times T} with total mass <= 1 {\displaystyle \leq 1} .[7] In the case where X , Y {\displaystyle X,Y} are Banach spaces, S {\displaystyle S} and T {\displaystyle T} can be taken to be the unit balls B X * {\displaystyle B_{X^{*}}} and B Y * {\displaystyle B_{Y^{*}}} .[8]

Furthermore, if A {\displaystyle A} is an equicontinuous subset of J ( X , Y ) {\displaystyle J(X,Y)} then the elements v A {\displaystyle v\in A} can be represented with S x T {\displaystyle S\times T} fixed and m {\displaystyle \mu } running through a norm bounded subset of the space of Radon measures on S x T . {\displaystyle S\times T.} [9]

Examples

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For X {\displaystyle X} a Banach space, certain constructions related to X {\displaystyle X} in Banach space theory can be realized as injective tensor products. Let c 0 ( X ) {\displaystyle c_{0}(X)} be the space of sequences of elements of X {\displaystyle X} converging to 0 {\displaystyle 0} , equipped with the norm || ( x i ) || = sup i || x i || X {\displaystyle \|(x_{i})\|=\sup _{i}\|x_{i}\|_{X}} . Let l 1 ( X ) {\displaystyle \ell _{1}(X)} be the space of unconditionally summable sequences in X {\displaystyle X} , equipped with the norm || ( x i ) || = sup { i = 1 | ph ( x i ) | : ph B X * } . {\displaystyle \|(x_{i})\|=\sup {\big \{}\sum _{i=1}^{\infty }|\varphi (x_{i})|:\varphi \in B_{X^{*}}{\big \}}.} Then c 0 ( X ) {\displaystyle c_{0}(X)} and l 1 ( X ) {\displaystyle \ell _{1}(X)} are Banach spaces, and isometrically c 0 ( X ) c 0 ^ e X {\displaystyle c_{0}(X)\cong c_{0}{\widehat {\otimes }}_{\varepsilon }X} and l 1 ( X ) l 1 ^ e X {\displaystyle \ell _{1}(X)\cong \ell _{1}{\widehat {\otimes }}_{\varepsilon }X} (where c 0 , l 1 {\displaystyle c_{0},\,\ell _{1}} are the classical sequence spaces).[10] These facts can be generalized to the case where X {\displaystyle X} is a locally convex TVS.[11]

If H {\displaystyle H} and K {\displaystyle K} are compact Hausdorff spaces, then C ( H x K ) C ( H ) ^ e C ( K ) {\displaystyle C(H\times K)\cong C(H){\widehat {\otimes }}_{\varepsilon }C(K)} as Banach spaces, where C ( X ) {\displaystyle C(X)} denotes the Banach space of continuous functions on X {\displaystyle X} .[11]

Spaces of differentiable functions

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Let O {\displaystyle \Omega } be an open subset of R n {\displaystyle \mathbb {R} ^{n}} , let Y {\displaystyle Y} be a complete, Hausdorff, locally convex topological vector space, and let C k ( O ; Y ) {\displaystyle C^{k}(\Omega ;Y)} be the space of k {\displaystyle k} -times continuously differentiable Y {\displaystyle Y} -valued functions. Then C k ( O ; Y ) C k ( O ) ^ e Y {\displaystyle C^{k}(\Omega ;Y)\cong C^{k}(\Omega ){\widehat {\otimes }}_{\varepsilon }Y} .

The Schwartz spaces L ( R n ) {\displaystyle {\mathcal {L}}\left(\mathbb {R} ^{n}\right)} can also be generalized to TVSs, as follows: let L ( R n ; Y ) {\displaystyle {\mathcal {L}}\left(\mathbb {R} ^{n};Y\right)} be the space of all f C ( R n ; Y ) {\displaystyle f\in C^{\infty }\left(\mathbb {R} ^{n};Y\right)} such that for all pairs of polynomials P {\displaystyle P} and Q {\displaystyle Q} in n {\displaystyle n} variables, { P ( x ) Q ( / x ) f ( x ) : x R n } {\displaystyle \left\{P(x)Q\left(\partial /\partial x\right)f(x):x\in \mathbb {R} ^{n}\right\}} is a bounded subset of Y . {\displaystyle Y.} Topologize L ( R n ; Y ) {\displaystyle {\mathcal {L}}\left(\mathbb {R} ^{n};Y\right)} with the topology of uniform convergence over R n {\displaystyle \mathbb {R} ^{n}} of the functions P ( x ) Q ( / x ) f ( x ) , {\displaystyle P(x)Q\left(\partial /\partial x\right)f(x),} as P {\displaystyle P} and Q {\displaystyle Q} vary over all possible pairs of polynomials in n {\displaystyle n} variables. Then, L ( R n ; Y ) L ( R n ) ^ e Y . {\displaystyle {\mathcal {L}}\left(\mathbb {R} ^{n};Y\right)\cong {\mathcal {L}}\left(\mathbb {R} ^{n}\right){\widehat {\otimes }}_{\varepsilon }Y.} [11]

Notes

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  1. ^ Treves 2006, pp. 427-428.
  2. ^ Ryan 2002, p. 45.
  3. ^ Treves 2006, p. 434.
  4. ^ Treves 2006, p. 439-444.
  5. ^ Treves 2006, p. 434-44.
  6. ^ Schaefer & Wolff 1999, p. 170.
  7. ^ Treves 2006, pp. 500-502.
  8. ^ Ryan 2002, p. 58.
  9. ^ Schaefer & Wolff 1999, p. 168.
  10. ^ Ryan 2002, pp. 47-49.
  11. ^ a b c Treves 2006, pp. 446-451.

References

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Further reading

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  • Diestel, Joe (2008). The metric theory of tensor products : Grothendieck's resume revisited. Providence, R.I: American Mathematical Society. ISBN 978-0-8218-4440-3. OCLC 185095773.
  • Grothendieck, Alexander (1955). "Produits Tensoriels Topologiques et Espaces Nucleaires" [Topological Tensor Products and Nuclear Spaces]. Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society Series (in French). 16. Providence: American Mathematical Society. MR 0075539. OCLC 9308061.
  • Grothendieck, Grothendieck (1966). Produits tensoriels topologiques et espaces nucleaires (in French). Providence: American Mathematical Society. ISBN 0-8218-1216-5. OCLC 1315788.
  • Pietsch, Albrecht (1972). Nuclear locally convex spaces. Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag. ISBN 0-387-05644-0. OCLC 539541.
  • Wong (1979). Schwartz spaces, nuclear spaces, and tensor products. Berlin New York: Springer-Verlag. ISBN 3-540-09513-6. OCLC 5126158.
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