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8. Tychonoff’s theorem and the Banach-Alaoglu theorem Klaus Thomsen [email protected] Institut for Matematiske Fag Det Naturvidenskabelige Fakultet Aarhus Universitet September 2005 Klaus Thomsen 8. Tychonoff’s theorem and the Banach-Alaoglu theorem We read in W. Rudin: Functional Analysis Covering Chapter 3, Appendix A2 and A3 and Theorem 3.15. Klaus Thomsen 8. Tychonoff’s theorem and the Banach-Alaoglu theorem Alexander’s subbase theorem Recall that a subbase of a topology is a collection S of open sets such that every open set is the union of sets that are finite intersections of elements from S. Theorem (Alexander’s subbase theorem) If S is a subbase for the topology of a space X , and any cover of X by elements of S has a finite subcover, then X is compact. In more detail: The assumptionSis that for any collection Uα , α ∈ I , of sets from S such that S X = α∈I Uα , there is a finite subset F ⊆ I such that X = α∈F Uα . And the conclusion S is that for any collection Wα , α ∈ I , of open sets such that X = α∈I Wα , there is a finite subset F ⊆ I such S that X = α∈F Wα . In short: ’It suffice to check the finite subcover condition with elements from a subbase’. Klaus Thomsen 8. Tychonoff’s theorem and the Banach-Alaoglu theorem The proof of Alexander’s subbase theorem Proof. The proof is by contradiction; that is, we assume that X is not compact, and deduce that there is then an S-cover of X without any finite subcover. Let P be the collection of all open covers of X without any finite subcover; P is non-empty by assumption. We partial order P by inclusion, and Ω be a maximal totally ordered subset (which exists by Hausdorff’s maximality theorem). Let Γ be the union of all members of Ω. Then a) Γ is an open cover of X , b) Γ has no finite subcover, and c) Γ ∪ {V } has a finite subcover for every open V ∈ / Γ. Klaus Thomsen 8. Tychonoff’s theorem and the Banach-Alaoglu theorem The proof of Alexander’s subbase theorem Proof. a) is obvious. b) follows because any finite collection from Γ is contained in some element of Ω; this follows because Ω is totally ordered. c) follows from the maximality of Ω; if Γ ∪ {V } does not have a finite subcover for some open V ∈ / Γ, we could add {V } ∪ Γ to Ω to get a totally ordered subset of P which is strictly larger than Ω. We finish the proof by using a)-c) to show that Γ ∩ S is a cover of X without any finite subcover. (!) Klaus Thomsen 8. Tychonoff’s theorem and the Banach-Alaoglu theorem The proof of Alexander’s subbase theorem It follows immediately from b) that Γ ∩ S has no finite subcover. It remains now only to show that Γ ∩ S covers X . Assume that it does not, i.e. that there is an x ∈ X which is not contained in any member of Γ ∩ S. Then x ∈ W for some W ∈ Γ. Since S is a subbase there is a finite collection V1 , V2 , . . . , Vn ∈ S such that x ∈ V1 ∩ V2 ∩ · · · ∩ Vn ⊆ W . Since x is not covered by Γ ∩ S, Vi ∈ / Γ for each i. It follows from c) that for each i, there is a union Yi of finitely many elements of Γ such that X = Vi ∪ Yi . T It follows then first that X = Y1 ∪ Y2 ∪ · · · ∪ Yn ∪ ( ni=1 Vi ), and then that T X = Y1 ∪ Y2 ∪ · · · ∪ Yn ∪ ( ni=1 Vi ) ⊆ Y1 ∪ Y2 ∪ · · · ∪ Yn ∪ W , which contradicts b). Klaus Thomsen 8. Tychonoff’s theorem and the Banach-Alaoglu theorem Tychonoff’s theorem Recall that the cartesian product of a collection Xα , α ∈ I , of topological spaces is the set Y Xα = (xα )α∈I : xα ∈ Xα . α∈I Q Let pβ : α∈I Xα → Xβ be the canonical surjection pβ (xα )α∈I = xβ . The cartesian product is equipped with the product topology which by definition is the topology for which the sets pα−1 (V ), α ∈ I , V ⊆ Xα open is a subbase which we denote by S in the following. Theorem If X is the cartesian of any nonempty collection of compact spaces, then X is compact. Klaus Thomsen 8. Tychonoff’s theorem and the Banach-Alaoglu theorem The proof of Tychonoff’s theorem Proof. Q To prove that X = α∈I Xα is compact when each Xα is we must show that any open cover Γ of X has a finite subcover. By Alexander’s subbase theorem we may assume that the sets in Γ come from S - the canonical subbase for the product topology. For each α ∈ I we let Sα denote the elements of S which are of the form pα−1 (V ) for some open subset V ⊆ Xα . Klaus Thomsen 8. Tychonoff’s theorem and the Banach-Alaoglu theorem The proof of Tychonoff’s theorem Proof. Note first that there must be a β ∈ I such that Γ ∩ Sβ covers X ; indeed, if not we have a point yβ ∈ X for each β such that yβ is not contained in any element of Γ ∩ Sβ . Set xβ = pβ (yβ ) ∈ Xβ . Since each element of Γ ∩ Sβ has the form pβ−1 (W ) for some open W ⊆ Xβ , we see that xβ is not contained in pβ (A) for any A ∈ Γ ∩ Sβ . But then x = (xβ )β∈I is an element of X which is not contained in any element of Γ; contradicting that Γ is a cover by assumption. Klaus Thomsen 8. Tychonoff’s theorem and the Banach-Alaoglu theorem The proof of Tychonoff’s theorem Proof. Let β ∈ I be an index such that Γ ∩ Sβ covers X . Write n o Γ ∩ Sβ = pβ−1 (Uj ) : j ∈ J , for some collection {Uj : j ∈ J} of open sets in Xβ . Note that {Uj : j ∈ J} must cover Xβ because pβ (X ) = Xβ , and Γ ∩ Sβ covers X . Since Xβ is compact S by assumption, there is a finite subset F ⊆ J such that Xβ = j∈F Uj . o n Then pβ−1 (Uj ) : j ∈ F is a finite subcover of Γ ∩ Sβ !!! Klaus Thomsen 8. Tychonoff’s theorem and the Banach-Alaoglu theorem The Banach-Alaoglu theorem Thyconoff’s theorem will now be used to prove the following: Theorem (Theorem 3.15) Let X be a topological vector space and V an open neighborhood of X . Then K = {l ∈ X ∗ : |l (x)| ≤ 1 ∀x ∈ V } . is weak* compact. Proof. By continuity of scalar multiplication there is for each x ∈ X a positive number γ(x) > 0 such that x ∈ γ(x)V . Hence |l (x)| ≤ γ(x) for all l ∈ K . Let Dx =Q{z ∈ Φ : |z| ≤ γ(x)} which is a compact subset of Φ. Let P = x∈X Dx be the cartesian product, and observe that P is compact by Thyconoff’s theorem. Klaus Thomsen 8. Tychonoff’s theorem and the Banach-Alaoglu theorem The Banach-Alaoglu theorem Proof. The elements of P are the functions f : X → Φ with the property that |f (x)| ≤ γ(x) for all x ∈ X . Thus K ⊆ X ∗ ∩ P. The proof is completed by showing (i) that the weak* topology on K is the same as the relative topology which K inherites from the product topology of P and (ii) K is closed in P. Both items are straightforward, but tedious to prove. The details are in Rudins book. We omit them here. Klaus Thomsen 8. Tychonoff’s theorem and the Banach-Alaoglu theorem The Banach-Alaoglu theorem Completing a normed space - an exercise! When X is a normed vector space - say over C - the dual X ∗ of X is also a normed space in the dual norm: kl k = sup {|l (x)| : x ∈ X , kxk ≤ 1} . First evaluation exercise: (a) Show that X ∗ is a Banach space. (b) Let X ∗∗ be the bidual of X , i.e. X ∗∗ = (X ∗ )∗ . Show that the map Λ : X → X ∗∗ given by Λ(x)(l ) = l (x), is a linear isometry. (c) Prove that Λ(X ) is dense in X ∗∗ for the X ∗ -topology of X ∗∗ . (d) Interpretate and prove the following statement: For every normed vector space X there is a Banach space X which contains an isometric copy of X as a dense subspace. X is unique up to isometric isomorphisms. Klaus Thomsen 8. Tychonoff’s theorem and the Banach-Alaoglu theorem The Banach-Alaoglu theorem If we apply Theorem 3.15 with V = {x ∈ X : kxk < 1} we obtain Theorem The unit ball {l ∈ X ∗ : kl k ≤ 1} of X ∗ is compact in the weak∗ -topology. Klaus Thomsen 8. Tychonoff’s theorem and the Banach-Alaoglu theorem