Banach open mapping theorem #
This file contains the Banach open mapping theorem, i.e., the fact that a bijective bounded linear map between Banach spaces has a bounded inverse.
A (possibly nonlinear) right inverse to a continuous linear map, which doesn't have to be
linear itself but which satisfies a bound βinverse xβ β€ C * βxβ
. A surjective continuous linear
map doesn't always have a continuous linear right inverse, but it always has a nonlinear inverse
in this sense, by Banach's open mapping theorem.
Instances For
Equations
- ContinuousLinearMap.instCoeFunNonlinearRightInverseForAll f = { coe := fun (fsymm : ContinuousLinearMap.NonlinearRightInverse f) => fsymm.toFun }
Given a continuous linear equivalence, the inverse is in particular an instance of
ContinuousLinearMap.NonlinearRightInverse
(which turns out to be linear).
Equations
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Instances For
Equations
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Proof of the Banach open mapping theorem #
First step of the proof of the Banach open mapping theorem (using completeness of F
):
by Baire's theorem, there exists a ball in E
whose image closure has nonempty interior.
Rescaling everything, it follows that any y β F
is arbitrarily well approached by
images of elements of norm at most C * βyβ
.
For further use, we will only need such an element whose image
is within distance βyβ/2
of y
, to apply an iterative process.
The Banach open mapping theorem: if a bounded linear map between Banach spaces is onto, then any point has a preimage with controlled norm.
The Banach open mapping theorem: a surjective bounded linear map between Banach spaces is open.
Applications of the Banach open mapping theorem #
A surjective continuous linear map between Banach spaces admits a (possibly nonlinear)
controlled right inverse. In general, it is not possible to ensure that such a right inverse
is linear (take for instance the map from E
to E/F
where F
is a closed subspace of E
without a closed complement. Then it doesn't have a continuous linear right inverse.)
Instances For
If a bounded linear map is a bijection, then its inverse is also a bounded linear map.
Associating to a linear equivalence between Banach spaces a continuous linear equivalence when the direct map is continuous, thanks to the Banach open mapping theorem that ensures that the inverse map is also continuous.
Instances For
An injective continuous linear map with a closed range defines a continuous linear equivalence between its domain and its range.
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Instances For
Convert a bijective continuous linear map f : E βL[π] F
from a Banach space to a normed space
to a continuous linear equivalence.
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Instances For
Intermediate definition used to show
ContinuousLinearMap.closed_complemented_range_of_isCompl_of_ker_eq_bot
.
This is f.coprod G.subtypeL
as a ContinuousLinearEquiv
.
Equations
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Instances For
The closed graph theorem : a linear map between two Banach spaces whose graph is closed is continuous.
A useful form of the closed graph theorem : let f
be a linear map between two Banach
spaces. To show that f
is continuous, it suffices to show that for any convergent sequence
uβ βΆ x
, if f(uβ) βΆ y
then y = f(x)
.
Upgrade a LinearMap
to a ContinuousLinearMap
using the closed graph theorem.
Equations
Instances For
Upgrade a LinearMap
to a ContinuousLinearMap
using a variation on the
closed graph theorem.