Written by a distinguished specialist in functional analysis, this book presents a comprehensive treatment of the history of Banach spaces and (abstract bounded) linear operators. Banach space theory is presented as a part of a broad mathematics context, using tools from such areas as set theory, topology, algebra, combinatorics, probability theory, logic, etc. Equal emphasis is given to both spaces and operators. The book may serve as a reference for researchers and as an introduction for graduate students who want to learn Banach space theory with some historical flavor.
This classic work by the late Stefan Banach has been translated into English so as to reach a yet wider audience. It contains the basics of the algebra of operators, concentrating on the study of linear operators, which corresponds to that of the linear forms a1x1 + a2x2 + ... + anxn of algebra.The book gathers results concerning linear operators defined in general spaces of a certain kind, principally in Banach spaces, examples of which are: the space of continuous functions, that of the pth-power-summable functions, Hilbert space, etc. The general theorems are interpreted in various mathematical areas, such as group theory, differential equations, integral equations, equations with infinitely many unknowns, functions of a real variable, summation methods and orthogonal series.A new fifty-page section (``Some Aspects of the Present Theory of Banach Spaces'') complements this important monograph.
Banach spaces provide a framework for linear and nonlinear functional analysis, operator theory, abstract analysis, probability, optimization and other branches of mathematics. This book introduces the reader to linear functional analysis and to related parts of infinite-dimensional Banach space theory. Key Features: - Develops classical theory, including weak topologies, locally convex space, Schauder bases and compact operator theory - Covers Radon-Nikodým property, finite-dimensional spaces and local theory on tensor products - Contains sections on uniform homeomorphisms and non-linear theory, Rosenthal's L1 theorem, fixed points, and more - Includes information about further topics and directions of research and some open problems at the end of each chapter - Provides numerous exercises for practice The text is suitable for graduate courses or for independent study. Prerequisites include basic courses in calculus and linear. Researchers in functional analysis will also benefit for this book as it can serve as a reference book.
This textbook introduces spectral theory for bounded linear operators by focusing on (i) the spectral theory and functional calculus for normal operators acting on Hilbert spaces; (ii) the Riesz-Dunford functional calculus for Banach-space operators; and (iii) the Fredholm theory in both Banach and Hilbert spaces. Detailed proofs of all theorems are included and presented with precision and clarity, especially for the spectral theorems, allowing students to thoroughly familiarize themselves with all the important concepts. Covering both basic and more advanced material, the five chapters and two appendices of this volume provide a modern treatment on spectral theory. Topics range from spectral results on the Banach algebra of bounded linear operators acting on Banach spaces to functional calculus for Hilbert and Banach-space operators, including Fredholm and multiplicity theories. Supplementary propositions and further notes are included as well, ensuring a wide range of topics in spectral theory are covered. Spectral Theory of Bounded Linear Operators is ideal for graduate students in mathematics, and will also appeal to a wider audience of statisticians, engineers, and physicists. Though it is mostly self-contained, a familiarity with functional analysis, especially operator theory, will be helpful.
This book is dedicated to a theory of traces and determinants on embedded algebras of linear operators, where the trace and determinant are extended from finite rank operators by a limit process. The self-contained material should appeal to a wide group of mathematicians and engineers, and is suitable for teaching.
Preparing students for further study of both the classical works and current research, this is an accessible text for students who have had a course in real and complex analysis and understand the basic properties of L p spaces. It is sprinkled liberally with examples, historical notes, citations, and original sources, and over 450 exercises provide practice in the use of the results developed in the text through supplementary examples and counterexamples.
INTRODUCTION . . . . . . xiii § 1. LINEAR EQUATIONS. BASIC NOTIONS . 3 § 2. EQUATIONS WITH A CLOSED OPERATOR 6 § 3. THE ADJOINT EQUATION . . . . . . 10 § 4. THE EQUATION ADJOINT TO THE FACTORED EQUATION. 17 § 5. AN EQUATION WITH A CLOSED OPERATOR WHICH HAS A DENSE DOMAIN 18 NORMALLY SOLVABLE EQUATIONS WITH FINITE DIMENSIONAL KERNEL. 22 § 6. A PRIORI ESTIMATES .. . . . . . 24 § 7. EQUATIONS WITH FINITE DEFECT . . . 27 § 8. § 9. SOME DIFFERENT ADJOINT EQUATIONS . 30 § 10. LINEAR TRANSFORMATIONS OF EQUATIONS 33 TRANSFORMATIONS OF d-NORMAL EQUATIONS . 38 § 11. § 12. NOETHERIAN EQUATIONS. INDEX. . . . . . 42 § 13. EQUATIONS WITH OPERATORS WHICH ACT IN A SINGLE SPACE 44 § 14. FREDHOLM EQUATIONS. REGULARIZATION OF EQUATIONS 46 § 15. LINEAR CHANGES OF VARIABLE . . . . . . . . 50 § 16. STABILITY OF THE PROPERTIES OF AN EQUATION 53 OVERDETERMINED EQUATIONS 59 § 17. § 18. UNDETERMINED EQUATIONS 62 § 19. INTEGRAL EQUATIONS . . . 65 DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS . 80 § 20. APPENDIX. BASIC RESULTS FROM FUNCTIONAL ANALYSIS USED IN THE TEXT 95 LITERATURE CITED . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . 99 . . PRE F ACE The basic material appearing in this book represents the substance v of a special series of lectures given by the author at Voronez University in 1968/69, and, in part, at Dagestan University in 1970.
This book is divided into two parts, the first one to study the theory of differentiable functions between Banach spaces and the second to study the differential form formalism and to address the Stokes' Theorem and its applications. Related to the first part, there is an introduction to the content of Linear Bounded Operators in Banach Spaces with classic examples of compact and Fredholm operators, this aiming to define the derivative of Fréchet and to give examples in Variational Calculus and to extend the results to Fredholm maps. The Inverse Function Theorem is explained in full details to help the reader to understand the proof details and its motivations. The inverse function theorem and applications make up this first part. The text contains an elementary approach to Vector Fields and Flows, including the Frobenius Theorem. The Differential Forms are introduced and applied to obtain the Stokes Theorem and to define De Rham cohomology groups. As an application, the final chapter contains an introduction to the Harmonic Functions and a geometric approach to Maxwell's equations of electromagnetism.