A short course on Banach space theory
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
A short course on Banach space theory
(London Mathematical Society student texts, 64)
Cambridge University Press, 2005
- : hard
- : pbk
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Hokkaido University, Library, Graduate School of Science, Faculty of Science and School of Science図書
DC22:515.732/C2222080022964
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Note
Bibliography: p.173-179
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This is a short course on Banach space theory with special emphasis on certain aspects of the classical theory. In particular, the course focuses on three major topics: the elementary theory of Schauder bases, an introduction to Lp spaces, and an introduction to C(K) spaces. While these topics can be traced back to Banach himself, our primary interest is in the postwar renaissance of Banach space theory brought about by James, Lindenstrauss, Mazur, Namioka, Pelczynski, and others. Their elegant and insightful results are useful in many contemporary research endeavors and deserve greater publicity. By way of prerequisites, the reader will need an elementary understanding of functional analysis and at least a passing familiarity with abstract measure theory. An introductory course in topology would also be helpful; however, the text includes a brief appendix on the topology needed for the course.
Table of Contents
- Preface
- 1. Classical Banach spaces
- 2. Preliminaries
- 3. Bases in Banach spaces
- 4. Bases in Banach spaces II
- 5. Bases in Banach spaces III
- 6. Special properties of C0, l1, and l
- 7. Bases and duality
- 8. Lp spaces
- 9. Lp spaces II
- 10. Lp spaces III
- 11. Convexity
- 12. C(K) Spaces
- 13. Weak compactness in L1
- 14. The Dunford-Pettis property
- 15. C(K) Spaces II
- 16. C(K) Spaces III
- A. Topology review.
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