Search results for "Mackey topology"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Operators on PIP-Spaces and Indexed PIP-Spaces

2009

As already mentioned, the basic idea of pip-spaces is that vectors should not be considered individually, but only in terms of the subspaces V r (r Є F), the building blocks of the structure. Correspondingly, an operator on a pipspace should be defined in terms of assaying subspaces only, with the proviso that only continuous or bounded operators are allowed. Thus an operator is a coherent collection of continuous operators. We recall that in a nondegenerate pip-space, every assaying subspace V r carries its Mackey topology \(\tau (V_r , V \bar{r})\) and thus its dual is \(V \bar{r}\). This applies in particular to \(V^{\#}\) and V itself. For simplicity, a continuous linear map between two…

CombinatoricsLinear mapsymbols.namesakeOperator (computer programming)Unitary representationBounded functionHilbert spacesymbolsProduct topologyLinear subspaceMathematicsMackey topology
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Quasi *-Algebras of Operators in Rigged Hilbert Spaces

2002

In this chapter, we will study families of operators acting on a rigged Hilbert space, with a particular interest in their partial algebraic structure. In Section 10.1 the notion of rigged Hilbert space D[t] ↪ H ↪ D × [t ×] is introduced and some examples are presented. In Section 10.2, we consider the space.L(D, D ×) of all continuous linear maps from D[t] into D × [t ×] and look for conditions under which (L(D, D ×), L +(D)) is a (topological) quasi *-algebra. Moreover the general problem of introducing in L(D, D ×) a partial multiplication is considered. In Section 10.3 representations of abstract quasi *-algebras into quasi*-algebras of operators are studied and the GNS-construction is …

Multiplication (music)Section (fiber bundle)Pure mathematicssymbols.namesakeFréchet spaceAlgebraic structureHilbert spacesymbolsTopological graph theoryRigged Hilbert spaceMathematicsMackey topology
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General Theory: Topological Aspects

2009

In Chapter 1, we have analyzed the structure of pip-spaces from the algebraic point of view only, (i.e., the compatibility relation). Here we will discuss primarily the topological structure given by the partial inner product itself. The aim is to tighten the definitions so as to eliminate as many pathologies as possible. The picture that emerges is reassuringly simple: Only two types of pip-spaces seem sufficiently regular to have any practical use, namely lattices of Hilbert spaces (LHS) or Banach spaces (LBS), that we have introduced briefly in the Introduction. Our standard reference on locally convex topological vector spaces (LCS) will be the textbook of Kothe [Kot69]. In addition, fo…

symbols.namesakeWeak topologyLocally convex topological vector spaceBanach spaceHilbert spacesymbolsStructure (category theory)TopologyStrong topology (polar topology)Mackey topologyMathematicsDual pair
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