A version of the Bartle--Graves theorem for temperate functions.
This note is an announcement of results contained in the papers [4], [5], [6] concerning isomorphic properties of Banach spaces in projective tensor products (for this definition and some property we refer to [1]). At the end, some new result is obtained too.
As a continuation of the work of Bennett and Carl for the case q = ∞, we consider absolutely (r,p,q)-summing inclusion maps between Minkowski sequence spaces, 1 ≤ p,q ≤ 2. Using these results we deduce parts of the limit orders of the corresponding operator ideals and an inclusion theorem between the ideals of (u,s,t)-nuclear and of absolutely (r,p,q)-summing operators, which gives a new proof of a result of Carl on Schatten class operators. Furthermore, we also consider inclusions between arbitrary...
We provide new characterizations of acyclic inductive spectra of Fréchet spaces which improve the classical theorem of Palamodov and Retakh. It turns out that acyclicity, sequential retractivity (defined by Floret) and further strong regularity conditions (introduced e.g. by Bierstedt and Meise) are all equivalent. This solves a problem that was folklore since around 1970. For inductive limits of Fréchet-Montel spaces we obtain even stronger results, in particular, Grothendieck's problem whether...
We define a Banach algebra 𝔄 to be dual if 𝔄 = (𝔄⁎)* for a closed submodule 𝔄⁎ of 𝔄*. The class of dual Banach algebras includes all W*-algebras, but also all algebras M(G) for locally compact groups G, all algebras ℒ(E) for reflexive Banach spaces E, as well as all biduals of Arens regular Banach algebras. The general impression is that amenable, dual Banach algebras are rather the exception than the rule. We confirm this impression. We first show that under certain conditions an amenable...
Let A be a unital strict Banach algebra, and let K + be the one-point compactification of a discrete topological space K. Denote by the weak tensor product of the algebra A and C(K +), the algebra of continuous functions on K +. We prove that if K has sufficiently large cardinality (depending on A), then the strict global dimension is equal to .