Goldstine theorem

(Redirected from Goldstine's theorem)

In functional analysis, a branch of mathematics, the Goldstine theorem, named after Herman Goldstine, is stated as follows:

Goldstine theorem. Let be a Banach space, then the image of the closed unit ball under the canonical embedding into the closed unit ball of the bidual space is a weak*-dense subset.

The conclusion of the theorem is not true for the norm topology, which can be seen by considering the Banach space of real sequences that converge to zero, c0 space and its bi-dual space Lp space

Proof

edit

Lemma

edit

For all     and   there exists an   such that   for all  

Proof of lemma

edit

By the surjectivity of   it is possible to find   with   for  

Now let  

Every element of   satisfies   and   so it suffices to show that the intersection is nonempty.

Assume for contradiction that it is empty. Then   and by the Hahn–Banach theorem there exists a linear form   such that   and   Then  [1] and therefore   which is a contradiction.

Proof of theorem

edit

Fix     and   Examine the set  

Let   be the embedding defined by   where   is the evaluation at   map. Sets of the form   form a base for the weak* topology,[2] so density follows once it is shown   for all such   The lemma above says that for any   there exists a   such that     and in particular   Since   we have   We can scale to get   The goal is to show that for a sufficiently small   we have  

Directly checking, one has  

Note that one can choose   sufficiently large so that   for  [3] Note as well that   If one chooses   so that   then  

Hence one gets   as desired.

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Rudin, Walter. Functional Analysis (Second ed.). Lemma 3.9. pp. 63–64.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  2. ^ Rudin, Walter. Functional Analysis (Second ed.). Equation (3) and the remark after. p. 69.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  3. ^ Folland, Gerald. Real Analysis: Modern Techniques and Their Applications (Second ed.). Proposition 5.2. pp. 153–154.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)