Densely defined operator

Function that is defined almost everywhere (mathematics)

In mathematics – specifically, in operator theory – a densely defined operator or partially defined operator is a type of partially defined function. In a topological sense, it is a linear operator that is defined "almost everywhere". Densely defined operators often arise in functional analysis as operations that one would like to apply to a larger class of objects than those for which they a priori "make sense".

Definition

A densely defined linear operator T {\displaystyle T} from one topological vector space, X , {\displaystyle X,} to another one, Y , {\displaystyle Y,} is a linear operator that is defined on a dense linear subspace dom ( T ) {\displaystyle \operatorname {dom} (T)} of X {\displaystyle X} and takes values in Y , {\displaystyle Y,} written T : dom ( T ) X Y . {\displaystyle T:\operatorname {dom} (T)\subseteq X\to Y.} Sometimes this is abbreviated as T : X Y {\displaystyle T:X\to Y} when the context makes it clear that X {\displaystyle X} might not be the set-theoretic domain of T . {\displaystyle T.}

Examples

Consider the space C 0 ( [ 0 , 1 ] ; R ) {\displaystyle C^{0}([0,1];\mathbb {R} )} of all real-valued, continuous functions defined on the unit interval; let C 1 ( [ 0 , 1 ] ; R ) {\displaystyle C^{1}([0,1];\mathbb {R} )} denote the subspace consisting of all continuously differentiable functions. Equip C 0 ( [ 0 , 1 ] ; R ) {\displaystyle C^{0}([0,1];\mathbb {R} )} with the supremum norm {\displaystyle \|\,\cdot \,\|_{\infty }} ; this makes C 0 ( [ 0 , 1 ] ; R ) {\displaystyle C^{0}([0,1];\mathbb {R} )} into a real Banach space. The differentiation operator D {\displaystyle D} given by

( D u ) ( x ) = u ( x ) {\displaystyle (\mathrm {D} u)(x)=u'(x)}
is a densely defined operator from C 0 ( [ 0 , 1 ] ; R ) {\displaystyle C^{0}([0,1];\mathbb {R} )} to itself, defined on the dense subspace C 1 ( [ 0 , 1 ] ; R ) . {\displaystyle C^{1}([0,1];\mathbb {R} ).} The operator D {\displaystyle \mathrm {D} } is an example of an unbounded linear operator, since
u n ( x ) = e n x  has  D u n u n = n . {\displaystyle u_{n}(x)=e^{-nx}\quad {\text{ has }}\quad {\frac {\left\|\mathrm {D} u_{n}\right\|_{\infty }}{\left\|u_{n}\right\|_{\infty }}}=n.}
This unboundedness causes problems if one wishes to somehow continuously extend the differentiation operator D {\displaystyle D} to the whole of C 0 ( [ 0 , 1 ] ; R ) . {\displaystyle C^{0}([0,1];\mathbb {R} ).}

The Paley–Wiener integral, on the other hand, is an example of a continuous extension of a densely defined operator. In any abstract Wiener space i : H E {\displaystyle i:H\to E} with adjoint j := i : E H , {\displaystyle j:=i^{*}:E^{*}\to H,} there is a natural continuous linear operator (in fact it is the inclusion, and is an isometry) from j ( E ) {\displaystyle j\left(E^{*}\right)} to L 2 ( E , γ ; R ) , {\displaystyle L^{2}(E,\gamma ;\mathbb {R} ),} under which j ( f ) j ( E ) H {\displaystyle j(f)\in j\left(E^{*}\right)\subseteq H} goes to the equivalence class [ f ] {\displaystyle [f]} of f {\displaystyle f} in L 2 ( E , γ ; R ) . {\displaystyle L^{2}(E,\gamma ;\mathbb {R} ).} It can be shown that j ( E ) {\displaystyle j\left(E^{*}\right)} is dense in H . {\displaystyle H.} Since the above inclusion is continuous, there is a unique continuous linear extension I : H L 2 ( E , γ ; R ) {\displaystyle I:H\to L^{2}(E,\gamma ;\mathbb {R} )} of the inclusion j ( E ) L 2 ( E , γ ; R ) {\displaystyle j\left(E^{*}\right)\to L^{2}(E,\gamma ;\mathbb {R} )} to the whole of H . {\displaystyle H.} This extension is the Paley–Wiener map.

See also

  • Blumberg theorem – Any real function on R admits a continuous restriction on a dense subset of R
  • Closed graph theorem (functional analysis) – Theorems connecting continuity to closure of graphs
  • Linear extension (linear algebra) – Mathematical function, in linear algebraPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets
  • Partial function – Function whose actual domain of definition may be smaller than its apparent domain

References

  • Renardy, Michael; Rogers, Robert C. (2004). An introduction to partial differential equations. Texts in Applied Mathematics 13 (Second ed.). New York: Springer-Verlag. pp. xiv+434. ISBN 0-387-00444-0. MR 2028503.
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