Displaying 101 – 120 of 161

Showing per page

Representing non-weakly compact operators

Manuel González, Eero Saksman, Hans-Olav Tylli (1995)

Studia Mathematica

For each S ∈ L(E) (with E a Banach space) the operator R(S) ∈ L(E**/E) is defined by R(S)(x** + E) = S**x** + E(x** ∈ E**). We study mapping properties of the correspondence S → R(S), which provides a representation R of the weak Calkin algebra L(E)/W(E) (here W(E) denotes the weakly compact operators on E). Our results display strongly varying behaviour of R. For instance, there are no non-zero compact operators in Im(R) in the case of L 1 and C(0,1), but R(L(E)/W(E)) identifies isometrically with...

Rings of PDE-preserving operators on nuclearly entire functions

Henrik Petersson (2004)

Studia Mathematica

Let E,F be Banach spaces where F = E’ or vice versa. If F has the approximation property, then the space of nuclearly entire functions of bounded type, N b ( E ) , and the space of exponential type functions, Exp(F), form a dual pair. The set of convolution operators on N b ( E ) (i.e. the continuous operators that commute with all translations) is formed by the transposes φ ( D ) t φ , φ ∈ Exp(F), of the multiplication operators φ :ψ ↦ φ ψ on Exp(F). A continuous operator T on N b ( E ) is PDE-preserving for a set ℙ ⊆ Exp(F) if it...

Some results about absolute summability of operators in Banach spaces.

Luis López Corral (1986)

Stochastica

In order to study the absolute summability of an operator T we consider the set ST = {{xn} | ∑||Txn|| < ∞}. It is well known that an operator T in a Hilbert space is nuclear if and only if ST contains an orthonormal basis and it is natural to ask under which conditions two orthonormal basis define the same left ideal of nuclear operators. Using results about ST we solve this problem in the more general context of Banach spaces.

Strongly compact algebras.

Miguel Lacruz, Victor Lomonosov, Luis Rodríguez Piazza (2006)

RACSAM

An algebra of bounded linear operators on a Hilbert space is said to be strongly compact if its unit ball is relatively compact in the strong operator topology. A bounded linear operator on a Hilbert space is said to be strongly compact if the algebra generated by the operator and the identity is strongly compact. This notion was introduced by Lomonosov as an approach to the invariant subspace problem for essentially normal operators. First of all, some basic properties of strongly compact algebras...

Currently displaying 101 – 120 of 161