James' Space
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In the area of mathematics known as
functional analysis Functional analysis is a branch of mathematical analysis, the core of which is formed by the study of vector spaces endowed with some kind of limit-related structure (for example, Inner product space#Definition, inner product, Norm (mathematics ...
, James' space is an important example in the theory of Banach spaces and commonly serves as useful counterexample to general statements concerning the structure of general Banach spaces. The space was first introduced in 1950 in a short paper by Robert C. James. James' space serves as an example of a space that is isometrically isomorphic to its double dual, while not being reflexive. Furthermore, James' space has a basis, while having no unconditional basis.


Definition

Let \mathcal denote the family of all finite increasing sequences of integers of odd length. For any sequence of real numbers x=(x_n) and p = (p_1,p_2,\ldots,p_) \in \mathcal we define the quantity : \, x\, _p := \left( x_^2 + \sum_^n (x_ - x_)^2 \right)^. James' space, denoted by J, is defined to be all elements ''x'' from ''c''0 satisfying \sup\ < \infty, endowed with the norm \, x\, := \sup\ \ (x\in \mathbf).


Properties

Source:Morrison, T.J. ''Functional Analysis: An introduction to Banach space theory''. Wiley. (2001) * James' space is a Banach space. * The canonical basis is a (conditional) Schauder basis for J. Furthermore, this basis is both monotone and shrinking. * J has no unconditional basis. * James' space is not reflexive. Its image into its double dual under the canonical embedding has codimension one. * James' space is however isometrically isomorphic to its double dual. * James' space is ''somewhat reflexive'', meaning every closed infinite-dimensional subspace contains an infinite dimensional reflexive subspace. In particular, every closed infinite-dimensional subspace contains an isomorphic copy of 2.


See also

* Tsirelson space


References

{{Functional analysis Functional analysis Banach spaces