Normal cone (functional analysis)

In mathematics, specifically in order theory and functional analysis, if is a cone at the origin in a topological vector space such that and if is the neighborhood filter at the origin, then is called normal if where and where for any subset is the -saturatation of [1]

Normal cones play an important role in the theory of ordered topological vector spaces and topological vector lattices.

Characterizations edit

If   is a cone in a TVS   then for any subset   let   be the  -saturated hull of   and for any collection   of subsets of   let   If   is a cone in a TVS   then   is normal if   where   is the neighborhood filter at the origin.[1]

If   is a collection of subsets of   and if   is a subset of   then   is a fundamental subfamily of   if every   is contained as a subset of some element of   If   is a family of subsets of a TVS   then a cone   in   is called a  -cone if   is a fundamental subfamily of   and   is a strict  -cone if   is a fundamental subfamily of  [1] Let   denote the family of all bounded subsets of  

If   is a cone in a TVS   (over the real or complex numbers), then the following are equivalent:[1]

  1.   is a normal cone.
  2. For every filter   in   if   then  
  3. There exists a neighborhood base   in   such that   implies  

and if   is a vector space over the reals then we may add to this list:[1]

  1. There exists a neighborhood base at the origin consisting of convex, balanced,  -saturated sets.
  2. There exists a generating family   of semi-norms on   such that   for all   and  

and if   is a locally convex space and if the dual cone of   is denoted by   then we may add to this list:[1]

  1. For any equicontinuous subset   there exists an equicontiuous   such that  
  2. The topology of   is the topology of uniform convergence on the equicontinuous subsets of  

and if   is an infrabarreled locally convex space and if   is the family of all strongly bounded subsets of   then we may add to this list:[1]

  1. The topology of   is the topology of uniform convergence on strongly bounded subsets of  
  2.   is a  -cone in  
    • this means that the family   is a fundamental subfamily of  
  3.   is a strict  -cone in  
    • this means that the family   is a fundamental subfamily of  

and if   is an ordered locally convex TVS over the reals whose positive cone is   then we may add to this list:

  1. there exists a Hausdorff locally compact topological space   such that   is isomorphic (as an ordered TVS) with a subspace of   where   is the space of all real-valued continuous functions on   under the topology of compact convergence.[2]

If   is a locally convex TVS,   is a cone in   with dual cone   and   is a saturated family of weakly bounded subsets of   then[1]

  1. if   is a  -cone then   is a normal cone for the  -topology on  ;
  2. if   is a normal cone for a  -topology on   consistent with   then   is a strict  -cone in  

If   is a Banach space,   is a closed cone in  , and   is the family of all bounded subsets of   then the dual cone   is normal in   if and only if   is a strict  -cone.[1]

If   is a Banach space and   is a cone in   then the following are equivalent:[1]

  1.   is a  -cone in  ;
  2.  ;
  3.   is a strict  -cone in  

Ordered topological vector spaces edit

Suppose   is an ordered topological vector space. That is,   is a topological vector space, and we define   whenever   lies in the cone  . The following statements are equivalent:[3]

  1. The cone   is normal;
  2. The normed space   admits an equivalent monotone norm;
  3. There exists a constant   such that   implies  ;
  4. The full hull   of the closed unit ball   of   is norm bounded;
  5. There is a constant   such that   implies  .

Properties edit

  • If   is a Hausdorff TVS then every normal cone in   is a proper cone.[1]
  • If   is a normable space and if   is a normal cone in   then  [1]
  • Suppose that the positive cone of an ordered locally convex TVS   is weakly normal in   and that   is an ordered locally convex TVS with positive cone   If   then   is dense in   where   is the canonical positive cone of   and   is the space   with the topology of simple convergence.[4]
    • If   is a family of bounded subsets of   then there are apparently no simple conditions guaranteeing that   is a  -cone in   even for the most common types of families   of bounded subsets of   (except for very special cases).[4]

Sufficient conditions edit

If the topology on   is locally convex then the closure of a normal cone is a normal cone.[1]

Suppose that   is a family of locally convex TVSs and that   is a cone in   If   is the locally convex direct sum then the cone   is a normal cone in   if and only if each   is normal in  [1]

If   is a locally convex space then the closure of a normal cone is a normal cone.[1]

If   is a cone in a locally convex TVS   and if   is the dual cone of   then   if and only if   is weakly normal.[1] Every normal cone in a locally convex TVS is weakly normal.[1] In a normed space, a cone is normal if and only if it is weakly normal.[1]

If   and   are ordered locally convex TVSs and if   is a family of bounded subsets of   then if the positive cone of   is a  -cone in   and if the positive cone of   is a normal cone in   then the positive cone of   is a normal cone for the  -topology on  [4]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Schaefer & Wolff 1999, pp. 215–222.
  2. ^ Schaefer & Wolff 1999, pp. 222–225.
  3. ^ Aliprantis, Charalambos D. (2007). Cones and duality. Rabee Tourky. Providence, R.I.: American Mathematical Society. ISBN 978-0-8218-4146-4. OCLC 87808043.
  4. ^ a b c Schaefer & Wolff 1999, pp. 225–229.

Bibliography edit