Functional Analysis/Special topics: Difference between revisions

From testwiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Pi zero
{{BookCat}}
 
(No difference)

Latest revision as of 12:07, 8 September 2017

This chapter collect some materials that didn't quite fit in the main development of the theory.

Fredholm theory

We recall that the closed unit ball of a Banach space is compact if and only if the space is finite-dimensional. This is a special case of the next lemma:

7 Lemma Let T:𝒳𝒴 be a closed densely defined operator. Then the following are equivalent.

  • (i) dimker(T)< and the range of T is closed.
  • (ii) Every bounded sequence fj𝒳 has a convergent subsequence when Tfj is convergent.

Proof: We may assume T has dense range. (i) (ii): Suppose fj is a bounded sequence such that Tfj is convergent. In view of the Hahn-Banach theorem, X is a direct sum of the kernel of T and some other subspace, say, 𝒲. Thus, we can write:

fj=gj+hj,(gjker(T),hj𝒲)

By the closed graph theorem, the inverse of T:𝒲𝒴 is continuous. Since Tfj=Thj, the continuity implies that hj is convergent. Since gj contains a convergent subsequence by the paragraph preceding the theorem, fj has a convergent subsequence then. (ii) (i): (ii) implies the first condition of (i), again by the preceding paragraph. For the second, suppose Tfj is convergent. Then by (ii) fj has a subsequence fjk converging to, say, f. Since the graph of T is closed, Tfjk converges to Tf.

A bounded linear operator T:12 between Hilbert spaces is said to be Fredholm if T and T* both satisfy the condition of (i) in the lemma. The definition is equivalent to requiring that the kernel of T and the quotient 2/T(1) are finite-dimensional. In fact, if 2/T(1) is finite-dimensional, then T(1) is a complemented subspace; thus, closed. That T has closed range implies that T* has closed range. For a Fredholm operator at least, it thus makes sense to define:

ind(T)=dimker(T)dimCoker(T).

Because of the first isomorphism theorem, the index is actually independent of any operator T when T is a map between finite-dimensional spaces. This is no longer the case for operators acting on infinite-dimensional spaces.

7 Lemma Let TB(1,2) and SB(2,3). If T and S are Fredholm operators, then ST is a Fredholm operator with

ind(ST)=ind(T)+ind(S).

Conversely, if 3=1, and both TS and ST are Fredholm operators, then T is a Fredholm operator.
Proof: Since

dimker(ST)dimker(S)+dimker(T), and dimCoker(ST)dimCoker(S)+dimCoker(T),

we see that ST is Fredholm. Next, using the identity

dimX+dimXY=dimY+dimYX

we compute:

dimker(ST)=dimker(S)ran(T)+dimker(T)=dimker(S)ker(T*)+dimker(T)
=dimker(T*)+dimker(S)+dimker(S)ker(T*)+dimker(T)
=ind(T)+ind(S)+dimker(T*S*).

For the conversely, let fj be a bounded sequence such that Tfj is convergent. Then STfj is convergent and so fj has a convergent sequence when ST is Fredholm. Thus, dimkerT< and T has closed range. That TS is a Fredholm operator shows that this is also true for T* and we conclude that T is Fredholm.

7 Theorem The mapping

Tind(T)

is a locally constant function on the set of Fredhold operators T:12.
Proof: By the Hahn-Banach theorem, we have decompositions:

1=C1ker(T),2=ran(T)C2.

With respect to these, we represent T by a block matrix:

T=[T000]

where T:C1ranT. By the above lemma, ind is invariant under row and column operations. Thus, for any S=[S1S2S3S4], we have:

ind(T+S)=ind([T+S100A])=ind(A),

since T+S1 is invertible when S is small. A depends on S but the point is that A is a linear operator between finite-dimensional spaces. Hence, the index of A is independent of A; thus, of S.

7 Corollary If TB(1,2) is a Fredholm operator and K is a compact operator, then T+K is a Fredholm operator with

ind(T+K)=ind(T)

Proof: Let fj be a bounded sequence such that (T+K)fj is convergent. By compactness, fj has a convergent subsequence fjk such that Kfjk is convergent. Tfjk is then convergent and so fjk contains a convergent subsequence. Since K* is compact, the same argument applies to T*+K*. The invariance of the index follows from the preceding theorem since T+λK is Fredholm for any complex number λ, and the index of T+λK is constant.

The next result, known as Fredholm alternative, is now easy but is very important in application.

7 Corollary If KB(1,2) is a compact, then

ker(KλI) and 2/ran(KλI)

have the same (finite) dimension for any nonzero complex number λ, and σ(K){0} consists of eigenvalues of K.
Proof: The first assertion follows from:

ind(KλI)=ind(Iλ1K)=0,

and the second is the immediate consequence.

7 Theorem Let TB(1,2). Then T is a Fredholm operator if and only if ITS and IST are finite-rank operators for some SB(2,1). Moreover, when ITS and IST are of trace class (e.g., of finite-rank),

ind(T)=Tr(IST)Tr(ITS)

Proof: Since the identities are Fredholm operators (in fact, any invertible operator) and since

ST=I1+(I1ST)
TS=I2+(I2TS)

ST and TS are Fredholm operators, which implies T is a Fredholm operator. Conversely, suppose T is a Fredholm operator. Then, as before, we can write:

T=[T000]

where T is invertible. If we set, for example, S=[T'1000], then S has required properties. Next, suppose S is given arbitrary: S=[S1S2S3S4]. Then

Tr(IST)=Tr(1S1T)+dimkerT.

Similarly, we compute:

Tr(ITS)=Tr(1TS1)+dimCokerT.

Now, since T(IS1T)=(ITS1)T, and T is invertible, we have:

Tr(IS1T)=Tr(ITS1).

Representations of compact groups

Theorem Every irreducible unitary representation of a compact group is finite-dimensional.

Template:BookCat