DF-spaces were first defined by Alexander Grothendieck and studied in detail by him in (Grothendieck 1954).
Grothendieck was led to introduce these spaces by the following property of strong duals of metrizable spaces: If is a metrizable locally convex space and is a sequence of convex 0-neighborhoods in such that absorbs every strongly bounded set, then is a 0-neighborhood in (where is the continuous dual space of endowed with the strong dual topology).[2]
is a countably quasi-barrelled space (i.e. every strongly bounded countable union of equicontinuous subsets of is equicontinuous), and
possesses a fundamental sequence of bounded (i.e. there exists a countable sequence of bounded subsets such that every bounded subset of is contained in some [3]).
Properties
Let be a DF-space and let be a convex balanced subset of Then is a neighborhood of the origin if and only if for every convex, balanced, bounded subset is a neighborhood of the origin in [1] Consequently, a linear map from a DF-space into a locally convex space is continuous if its restriction to each bounded subset of the domain is continuous.[1]
The strong dual of a metrizable locally convex space is a DF-space[8] but the convers is in general not true[8] (the converse being the statement that every DF-space is the strong dual of some metrizable locally convex space). From this it follows:
The locally convex sum of a sequence of DF-spaces is a DF-space.[10]
An inductive limit of a sequence of DF-spaces is a DF-space.[10]
Suppose that and are DF-spaces. Then the projective tensor product, as well as its completion, of these spaces is a DF-space.[6]
However,
An infinite product of non-trivial DF-spaces (i.e. all factors have non-0 dimension) is not a DF-space.[10]
A closed vector subspace of a DF-space is not necessarily a DF-space.[10]
There exist complete DF-spaces that are not TVS-isomorphic to the strong dual of a metrizable locally convex TVS.[10]
Examples
There exist complete DF-spaces that are not TVS-isomorphic with the strong dual of a metrizable locally convex space.[10]
There exist DF-spaces having closed vector subspaces that are not DF-spaces.[11]
See also
Barreled space – Type of topological vector spacePages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets
Grothendieck, Alexander (1955). "Produits Tensoriels Topologiques et Espaces Nucléaires" [Topological Tensor Products and Nuclear Spaces]. Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society Series (in French). 16. Providence: American Mathematical Society. ISBN978-0-8218-1216-7. MR0075539. OCLC1315788.