James's theorem
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In mathematics, particularly functional analysis, James' theorem, named for Robert C. James, states that a Banach space X is reflexive if and only if every continuous
linear functional In mathematics, a linear form (also known as a linear functional, a one-form, or a covector) is a linear map from a vector space to its field of scalars (often, the real numbers or the complex numbers). If is a vector space over a field , the ...
on X attains its supremum on the closed unit ball in X. A stronger version of the theorem states that a
weakly closed In mathematics, weak topology is an alternative term for certain initial topologies, often on topological vector spaces or spaces of linear operators, for instance on a Hilbert space. The term is most commonly used for the initial topology of a ...
subset C of a Banach space X is weakly compact if and only if each continuous linear functional on X attains a maximum on C. The hypothesis of completeness in the theorem cannot be dropped.


Statements

The space X considered can be a real or complex Banach space. Its
continuous dual space In mathematics, any vector space ''V'' has a corresponding dual vector space (or just dual space for short) consisting of all linear forms on ''V'', together with the vector space structure of pointwise addition and scalar multiplication by const ...
is denoted by X^. The topological dual of ℝ-Banach space deduced from X by any restriction scalar will be denoted X^_. (It is of interest only if X is a complex space because if X is a \R-space then X^_ = X^.) A Banach space being reflexive if and only if its closed unit ball is weakly compact one deduces from this, since the norm of a continuous linear form is the upper bound of its module on this ball:


History

Historically, these sentences were proved in reverse order. In 1957, James had proved the reflexivity criterion for separable Banach spaces and 1964 for general Banach spaces. Since the reflexivity is equivalent to the weak compactness of the unit sphere, Victor L. Klee reformulated this as a compactness criterion for the unit sphere in 1962 and assumes that this criterion characterizes any weakly compact quantities. This was then actually proved by James in 1964.


See also

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Notes


References

* * . * . * . * . * {{Functional analysis Theorems in functional analysis