Continuous linear extension
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In functional analysis, it is often convenient to define a linear transformation on a complete, normed vector space X by first defining a linear transformation
on a dense subset of X and then extending
to the whole space via the theorem below. The resulting extension remains linear and bounded (thus continuous).
This procedure is known as continuous linear extension.
Contents |
[edit] Theorem
Every bounded linear transformation
from a normed vector space X to a complete, normed vector space Y can be uniquely extended to a bounded linear transformation
from the completion of X to Y. In addition, the operator norm of
is c iff the norm of
is c.
This theorem is sometimes called the B L T theorem, where B L T stands for bounded linear transformation.
[edit] Application
Consider, for instance, the definition of the Riemann integral. A step function on a closed interval [a,b] is a function of the form:
where
are real numbers,
, and 1S denotes the indicator function of the set S. The space of all step functions on [a,b], normed by the
norm (see Lp space), is a normed vector space which we denote by
. Define the integral of a step function by:
.
as a function is a bounded linear transformation from
into
[1].
Let
denote the space of bounded, piecewise continuous functions on [a,b] that are continuous from the right, along with the
norm. The space
is dense in
, so we can apply the B.L.T. theorem to extend the linear transformation
to a bounded linear transformation
from
to
. This defines the Riemann integral of all functions in
; for every
,
.
[edit] The Hahn-Banach theorem
The above theorem can be used to extend a bounded linear transformation
to a bounded linear transformation from
to Y, if S is dense in X. If S is not dense in X, then the Hahn-Banach theorem may sometimes be used to show that an extension exists. However, the extension may not be unique.
[edit] References
- Reed, Michael; Barry Simon (1980). Methods of Modern Mathematical Physics, Vol. 1: Functional Analysis. San Diego: Academic Press. ISBN 0125850506.
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ Here,
is also a normed vector space;
is a vector space because it satisfies all of the vector space axioms (with the rationals
as the base field) and is normed by the absolute value function.

