Riesz's lemma
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Riesz's lemma is an lemma in functional analysis. It specifies (often easy to check) conditions which guarantee that a subspace in a normed linear space is dense.
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[edit] The result
Before stating the result, we fix some notation. Let X be a normed linear space with norm | . | and x be an element of X. Let Y be a subspace in X. The distance between an element x and Y is defined by
Riesz's lemma reads as follows:
- Let X be a normed linear space and Y be a subspace in X. If there exists 0 < r < 1 such that for every x ∈ X with |x| =1, one has d(x, Y) < r, then Y is dense in X.
In other words, for every proper closed subspace Y, one can always find a vector x on the unit sphere of X such that d(x, Y) is less than and arbitrarily close to 1.
Proof: A simple proof can be sketched as follows. Suppose Y is not dense in X, therefore the closure of Y, denoted by Y' , is a proper subspace of X. Take an element x not in Y' , then we have
So, for any k > 1, there exists y0 in Y' such that
Consider the vector z = x - y0. We can calculate directly
for any y in Y. Choosing k arbitrarily close to 1 finishes the proof.
[edit] Note
For the finite dimensional case, equality can be achieved. In other words, there exists x of unit norm such that d(x, Y) is 1. When dimension of X is finite, the unit ball B ⊂ X is compact. Also, the distance function d(· , Y) is continuous. Therefore its image on the unit ball B must be a compact subset of the real line, and this proves the claim.
On the other hand, the example of the space l∞ of all bounded sequences shows that the lemma does not hold for k = 1.
[edit] Some consequences
[edit] Noncompactness of unit ball
Riesz's lemma can be applied directly to show that the unit ball of an infinite-dimensional normed space X is never compact. Take an element x1 from the unit sphere. Pick xn from the unit sphere such that
- d(xn,Yn − 1) > k for a constant 0 < k < 1, where Yn-1 is the linear span of {x1 ... xn-1}.
Clearly {xn} contains no convergent subsequence and the noncompactness of the unit ball follows.
[edit] Spectral theory of compact operators
The spectral properties of compact operators acting on a Banach space are similar to those of matrices. Riesz's lemma is essential in establishing this fact.
[edit] Other
Riesz's lemma guarantees that any infinite-dimensional normed space contains a sequence of unit vectors xn with | xn − xm | > k for 0 < k < 1. This is useful in showing the non existence of certain measures on infinite-dimensional Banach spaces.