- Riesz's lemma
Riesz's lemma is an lemma in
functional analysis . It specifies (often easy to check) conditions which guarantee that asubspace in anormed linear space is dense.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 "y"0 in " Y' " such that
:
Consider the vector z = "x" - "y"0. We can calculate directly
:
for any "y" in "Y". Choosing "k" arbitrarily close to 1 finishes the proof.
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.
Converse
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 "x"1 from the unit sphere. Pick "x""n" from the unit sphere such that: for a constant 0 < "k" < 1, where "Y""n-1" is the linear span of {"x"1 ... "x""n-1"}.
Clearly {"x""n"} contains no convergent subsequence and the noncompactness of the unit ball follows.
The converse of this, in a more general setting, is also true. If a
topological vector space "X" islocally compact , then it is finite dimensional. Therefore local compactness characterizes finite-dimensionality. This classical result is also attributed to Riesz. A short proof can be sketched as follows: let "C" be a compact neighborhood of 0 ∈ "X". By compactness, there is "c"1 ... "cn" ∈ "C" such that:
We claim that the finite dimenional subspace "Y" spanned by {"ci"}, or equivalently, its closure, is "X". Since scalar multiplication is continuous, its enough to show "C" ⊂ "Y". Now, by induction,
:
for every "m". But compact sets are bounded, so "C" lies in the closure of "Y". This proves the result.
Some consequences
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.
Riesz's lemma guarantees that any infinite-dimensional normed space contains a sequence of unit vectors with for 0 < "k" < 1. This is useful in showing the non existence of certain measures on infinite-dimensional
Banach space s.
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