In functional analysis, the Grothendieck trace theorem is an extension of Lidskii's theorem about the trace and the determinant of a certain class of nuclear operators on Banach spaces, the so-called -nuclear operators.[1] The theorem was proven in 1955 by Alexander Grothendieck.[2] Lidskii's theorem does not hold in general for Banach spaces.
The theorem should not be confused with the Grothendieck trace formula from algebraic geometry.
Grothendieck trace theorem
editGiven a Banach space with the approximation property and denote its dual as .
⅔-nuclear operators
editLet be a nuclear operator on , then is a -nuclear operator if it has a decomposition of the form where and and
Grothendieck's trace theorem
editLet denote the eigenvalues of a -nuclear operator counted with their algebraic multiplicities. If then the following equalities hold: and for the Fredholm determinant
See also
edit- Nuclear operators between Banach spaces – operators on Banach spaces with properties similar to finite-dimensional operators
Literature
edit- Gohberg, Israel; Goldberg, Seymour; Krupnik, Nahum (1991). Traces and Determinants of Linear Operators. Operator Theory Advances and Applications. Basel: Birkhäuser. p. 102. ISBN 978-3-7643-6177-8.
References
edit- ^ Gohberg, Israel; Goldberg, Seymour; Krupnik, Nahum (1991). Traces and Determinants of Linear Operators. Operator Theory Advances and Applications. Basel: Birkhäuser. p. 102. ISBN 978-3-7643-6177-8.
- ^ * Grothendieck, Alexander (1955). Produits tensoriels topologiques et espaces nucléaires (in French). Providence: American Mathematical Society. p. 19. ISBN 0-8218-1216-5. OCLC 1315788.