Function space

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Template:Short description Template:Functions In mathematics, a function space is a set of functions between two fixed sets. Often, the domain and/or codomain will have additional structure which is inherited by the function space. For example, the set of functions from any set Template:Var into a vector space has a natural vector space structure given by pointwise addition and scalar multiplication. In other scenarios, the function space might inherit a topological or metric structure, hence the name function space.

In linear algebraEdit

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Let Template:Var be a field and let Template:Var be any set. The functions Template:VarTemplate:Var can be given the structure of a vector space over Template:Var where the operations are defined pointwise, that is, for any Template:Var, Template:Var : Template:VarTemplate:Var, any Template:Var in Template:Var, and any Template:Var in Template:Var, define <math display="block"> \begin{align}

 (f+g)(x) &= f(x)+g(x) \\
 (c\cdot f)(x) &= c\cdot f(x)

\end{align} </math> When the domain Template:Var has additional structure, one might consider instead the subset (or subspace) of all such functions which respect that structure. For example, if Template:Var and also Template:Var itself are vector spaces over Template:Var, the set of linear maps Template:VarTemplate:Var form a vector space over Template:Var with pointwise operations (often denoted Hom(Template:Var,Template:Var)). One such space is the dual space of Template:Var: the set of linear functionals Template:VarTemplate:Var with addition and scalar multiplication defined pointwise.

The cardinal dimension of a function space with no extra structure can be found by the Erdős–Kaplansky theorem.

ExamplesEdit

Function spaces appear in various areas of mathematics:

Functional analysisEdit

Functional analysis is organized around adequate techniques to bring function spaces as topological vector spaces within reach of the ideas that would apply to normed spaces of finite dimension. Here we use the real line as an example domain, but the spaces below exist on suitable open subsets <math>\Omega \subseteq \R^n</math>

NormEdit

If Template:Math is an element of the function space <math> \mathcal {C}(a,b) </math> of all continuous functions that are defined on a closed interval Template:Closed-closed, the norm <math>\|y\|_\infty</math> defined on <math> \mathcal {C}(a,b) </math> is the maximum absolute value of Template:Math for Template:Math,<ref name='GelfandFominP6'>Template:Cite book</ref> <math display="block"> \| y \|_\infty \equiv \max_{a \le x \le b} |y(x)| \qquad \text{where} \ \ y \in \mathcal {C}(a,b) </math>

is called the uniform norm or supremum norm ('sup norm').

BibliographyEdit

  • Kolmogorov, A. N., & Fomin, S. V. (1967). Elements of the theory of functions and functional analysis. Courier Dover Publications.
  • Stein, Elias; Shakarchi, R. (2011). Functional Analysis: An Introduction to Further Topics in Analysis. Princeton University Press.

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

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