Normed Vector Space
Normed Vector Space
In mathematics, with 2- or 3-dimensional vectors with real-valued entries, the idea of the "length" of a vector is intuitive and can easily be extended to any real vector space Rn . The following properties of "vector length" are crucial. 1. The zero vector, 0, has zero length; every other vector has a positive length. if 2. Multiplying a vector by a positive number changes its length without changing its direction. Moreover, for any scalar 3. The triangle inequality holds. That is, taking norms as distances, the distance from point A through B to C is never shorter than going directly from A to C, or the shortest distance between any two points is a straight line. for any vectors x and y. (triangle inequality) The generalization of these three properties to more abstract vector spaces leads to the notion of norm. A vector space on which a norm is defined is then called a normed vector space .[1] Normed vector spaces are central to the study of linear algebra and functional analysis.
Contents
1 Definition 2 Topological structure 3 Linear maps and dual spaces 4 Normed spaces as quotient spaces of seminormed spaces 5 Finite product spaces 6 See also 7 References
Definition
A normed vector space is a pair (V, ) where V is a vector space and a norm on V. A seminormed vector space is a pair (V,p) where V is a vector space and p a seminorm on V. We often omit p or and just write V for a space if it is clear from the context what (semi) norm we are using. In a more general sense, a vector norm can be taken to be any real-valued function that satisfies these three properties. The properties 1. and 2. together imply that
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if and only if
A useful variation of the triangle inequality is for any vectors x and y. This also shows that a vector norm is a continuous function.
Topological structure
If (V, ) is a normed vector space, the norm induces a metric (a notion of distance) and therefore a topology on V. This metric is defined in the natural way: the distance between two vectors u and v is given by uv. This topology is precisely the weakest topology which makes continuous and which is compatible with the linear structure of V in the following sense: 1. The vector addition + : V V V is jointly continuous with respect to this topology. This follows directly from the triangle inequality. 2. The scalar multiplication : K V V, where K is the underlying scalar field of V, is jointly continuous. This follows from the triangle inequality and homogeneity of the norm. Similarly, for any semi-normed vector space we can define the distance between two vectors u and v as uv. This turns the seminormed space into a pseudometric space (notice this is weaker than a metric) and allows the definition of notions such as continuity and convergence. To put it more abstractly every semi-normed vector space is a topological vector space and thus carries a topological structure which is induced by the semi-norm. Of special interest are complete normed spaces called Banach spaces. Every normed vector space V sits as a dense subspace inside a Banach space; this Banach space is essentially uniquely defined by V and is called the completion of V. All norms on a finite-dimensional vector space are equivalent from a topological viewpoint as they induce the same topology (although the resulting metric spaces need not be the same).[2] And since any Euclidean space is complete, we can thus conclude that all finite-dimensional normed vector spaces are Banach spaces. A normed vector space V is locally compact if and only if the unit ball B = {x : x 1} is compact, which is the case if and only if V is finite-dimensional; this is a consequence of Riesz's lemma. (In fact, a more general result is true: a topological vector space is locally compact if and only if it is finite-dimensional. The point here is that we don't assume the topology comes from a norm.) The topology of a seminormed vector has many nice properties. Given a neighbourhood system we can construct all other neighbourhood systems as around 0
with .
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Moreover there exists a neighbourhood basis for 0 consisting of absorbing and convex sets. As this property is very useful in functional analysis, generalizations of normed vector spaces with this property are studied under the name locally convex spaces.
is a seminorm on the vector space of all functions on which the Lebesgue integral on the right hand side is defined and finite. However, the seminorm is equal to zero for any function supported on a set of Lebesgue measure zero. These functions form a subspace which we "quotient out", making them equivalent to the zero function.
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for example as . which is a seminorm on X. The function q is a norm if and only if all qi are norms. More generally, for each real p1 we have the seminorm:
For each p this defines the same topological space. A straightforward argument involving elementary linear algebra shows that the only finite-dimensional seminormed spaces are those arising as the product space of a normed space and a space with trivial seminorm. Consequently, many of the more interesting examples and applications of seminormed spaces occur for infinite-dimensional vector spaces.
See also
locally convex spaces, generalizations of seminormed vector spaces Banach spaces, normed vector spaces which are complete with respect to the metric induced by the norm inner product spaces, normed vector spaces where the norm is given by an inner product Finsler manifold Space (mathematics)
References
1. ^ Callier, Frank M. (1991). Linear System Theory. New York: Springer-Verlag. ISBN 0-387-97573-X. 2. ^ Kedlaya, Kiran S. (2010), p-adic differential equations, Cambridge Studies in Advanced Mathematics 125, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-76879-5, Theorem 1.3.6
Rolewicz, Stefan (1987), Functional analysis and control theory: Linear systems, Mathematics and its Applications (East European Series) 29 (Translated from the Polish by Ewa Bednarczuk ed.), Dordrecht; Warsaw: D. Reidel Publishing Co.; PWNPolish Scientific Publishers, pp. xvi+524, ISBN 90-277-2186en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Normed_vector_space 4/5
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6, MR 920371 (//www.ams.org/mathscinet-getitem?mr=920371), OCLC 13064804 (//www.worldcat.org/oclc/13064804) Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Normed_vector_space&oldid=585794980" Categories: Normed spaces This page was last modified on 12 December 2013 at 20:15. Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.
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