Timestamps and Summary of Lecture 2: Bounded Linear Operators 0:00 - Review of Banach Spaces In the previous lecture, we started with vector spaces (algebraic structures defined over a field, closed by operations of addition & scaling). We examined normed vector spaces, i.e. those with a notion of "size". Norms naturally give rise to metrics, furnishing an analytic context. Those normed vector spaces that are complete (every Cauchy sequence converges) with respect to the metric induced by their norm, are called Banach spaces -- central objects of study in functional analysis. 1:13 - Summability: Definition: A series is summable if its sequence of partial sums converges. It is absolutely summable if the series of its norms (nonnegative numbers) converges, which is stronger than regular summability. Useful theorem: a space is Banach if and only if the converse holds. 19:05 - Operators and Linear Functionals. Linear operators (or linear maps) between vector spaces are described here as the analog of matrices; there is a correspondence between linear maps of finite-dimensional vector spaces and matrices that represent these transformations on a given basis. Functionals are linear operators from a vector space to its base field. 19:56 - Example of a Linear Operator: Consider a continuous map from the unit square to the complex numbers that takes in a function in C([0, 1]) and "convolves it" by integrating its product with the aforementioned map over the compact interval [0, 1]. This is linear by the usual properties of integration. 23:16 - Linear operators in full generality from V -> W. A linear operator between two vector spaces satisfies additivity and scalar homogeneity. As algebraic structures, vector spaces are essentially characterized by their closure under addition and scalar multiplication from a base field. The carrying-over of these properties from V to W indicates that linear operators are the "correct" structure-preserving maps to study between vector spaces (abstractly, K-linear maps are the morphisms in the category of vector spaces over K). 26:30 - Continuous Linear Operators We describe a linear operator as continuous if it preserves convergent sequences. Equivalently, we can formulate continuity in a topological manner: inverse images of open sets under continuous maps remain open. This is important to distinguish in the infinite-dimensional case -- all norms on finite-dimensional vector spaces are equivalent, hence all operators between f.d. spaces are continuous, but this need not hold for Banach spaces (as we've seen, spaces like C([0, 1]) are infinite-dimensional). Unlike general or f.d. vector spaces, Banach spaces express nontrivial analytic information: to study them appropriately, we must restrict to a suitable class of continuous linear maps that do convey this data. 30:06 - Continuity and Boundedness Theorem: a linear operator between normed vector spaces is continuous if and only if it is bounded. Informally, knowing that an operator between normed vector spaces "maps arbitrarily close points to arbitrarily close points" tells us the same information that it "maps bounded subsets to bounded subsets". It turns out that it's enough to show this criterion for continuity at a single point, e.g., the zero vector. 44:10 - Example of a Bounded Operator Interpreting the earlier example as a continuous linear operator from C([0, 1]) -> C([0, 1]), it is clearly continuous when acting on continuous functions. Regarding it as a map between normed vector spaces (in fact, Banach spaces) allows us to view it as a bounded operator, specifically under the supremum norm as discussed in the prior lecture. 49:30 - The Space B(V, W) Given two normed vector spaces V and W, we define B(V, W) to consist of all bounded (eq. continuous) linear functionals V -> W. Define on it the operator norm, which returns the maximal norm of a vector in the image of a given bounded linear operator; by linearity we don't lose any information by normalizing & considering the supremum over the images of just unit vectors. This is checked to satisfy the norm axioms, turning B(V, W) into a normed vector space in its own right. 58:44 - If W is Banach, so is B(V, W) Strengthening the previous observation that B(V, W) is a normed vector space, if we assume that W is Banach (V need only be an NVS) then B(V, W) itself becomes a Banach space. Completeness follows from the initial lemma that a space is Banach when a series is absolutely summable if and only if it is summable. 1:21:08 - The (Continuous) Dual Space For any normed vector space V, define its continuous/topological dual space V' to consist of all bounded linear functionals from V to its base field K. (i.e. B(V, K) with the above notation). These are always Banach - for the l^p sequence spaces, examples include (l^1)' = l^∞, but (l^∞)' is not l^1 (not symmetric!). In general (l^p)' = l^q, where 1/p + 1/q = 1 (conjugate exponents); l^2 is special since it is self-dual. Note: for finite-dimensional vector spaces, V' coincides with the usual (algebraic) dual space of all linear functionals V -> K because continuity is immediate. However, it is strictly a subspace of the algebraic dual in infinite dimension, since one can always construct discontinuous linear functionals on infinite-dimensional vector spaces.
@MostInterestingChannel2 ай бұрын
wow, you are goated
@hausdorffm Жыл бұрын
6:02 Theorem A. Let V be a normed space. Then, the following two are equivalent. 1)V is Banach space. 2)If a series of V is absolutely summable, then the series is summable. 1:05:26 Let V, W be normed spaces, and denote by B(V,W) the bounded linear oparators from V to W. Using the above equivalences, the theorem follows: Theorem B. If W is a Banach space, then B(V,W) is also a Banach space. 1:22:17 In the theorem B, if we take W = K, K is, e.g., complex numbers or reals, then W satisfies the condition of theorem B, so B(V, K) is also a Banach space, which is called the dual space of V. Here, V is assumed as a vector space over K. Examples. dual of L^1 = L^inf dual of L^2 = L^2 But dual of L^inf is NOT L^1.
@squeezy7252 Жыл бұрын
3:35 I was indeed laughing! :D
@leedanilek51912 жыл бұрын
Finally taking my "first adult analysis class"!
@aziz0x00 Жыл бұрын
haha so fun
@dneary2 жыл бұрын
Are you teaching to an empty classroom for this class? Your "I'm going to assume you're laughing" comment led me to believe you were! Which is very impressive.
@katharinelong54722 жыл бұрын
I think these classes were during the Covid shutdown, so, yeah, it’s an empty classroom.
@jhanhadderhernandeztunubal58833 ай бұрын
1:11:38: There is a typo. It should be T_nV_1 and T_nV_2 instead of TV_1 and TV_2.
@aziz0x00 Жыл бұрын
thank you so much for making this available!!!!!!!!! so glad
@randalllionelkharkrang40472 жыл бұрын
Does this have solutions to assignments to compare solutions?
@mitocw2 жыл бұрын
This course does not have problem sets solutions. For more info, see the course on MIT OpenCourseWare at: ocw.mit.edu/courses/18-102-introduction-to-functional-analysis-spring-2021/. Best wishes on your studies!
@aziz0x00 Жыл бұрын
thank you so much@@mitocw
@foli90925 ай бұрын
Thanks for these lectures, they are great!
@thomasjefferson622511 ай бұрын
anyone got a place to find solutions for these exercises? I know theres non released, but it would be super to see if my logic is right or not.
@hobit75852 жыл бұрын
Why not Leipzig continuous and just bounded?
@lonjezosithole62852 жыл бұрын
Lipschitz?
@thomasjefferson622511 ай бұрын
See how he was real slow to write example? He wrote exam ... wait 3 seconds ple. man this teacher is awesome isnt he.
@ryanmcfadden4662Ай бұрын
How come you did not invite me Tom?
@boonga58510 ай бұрын
5:47
@scientiaetveritas404 ай бұрын
Excellent lecture but I am surprised MIT is still using chalkboards. My school switched to whiteboards years ago.
@KrazyKittyTailz3 ай бұрын
Those sliding MIT chalkboards have been iconic for as long as I've known that campus!
@ryanchiang958711 ай бұрын
unbounded linear operator
@irshadsirslectures444611 ай бұрын
No motivation no examples
@phaecops Жыл бұрын
This is not teaching. This is just copying the textbook to the blackboard and reciting the textbook text. A real teacher would give concrete examples which showed with integers how these functions worked.
@jongxina3595 Жыл бұрын
integers?
@sowaszpieg7528 Жыл бұрын
What are you talking about dude, the guys taking this course are supposed to have covered real analysis and linear algebra. These prerequisites should allow one to understand this stuff without "integer examples". At the first encounter with maths one may need more down-to-earth examples to acquire some intuition. But you can't hope to cling to those forever. At some point you use abstract maths to provide intuition for yet more abstract maths etc
@EggFriedRiceSoNice Жыл бұрын
really:/
@phaecops Жыл бұрын
@@sowaszpieg7528 You are incorrect and starstruck. Everything he put on the blackboard was available in the textbook. None of the students asked questions meaning they were not being inspired by flashes of new knowledge insights. You are just fanboy who thinks a wise old prof can do no wrong.
@contacthome1066 Жыл бұрын
@@sowaszpieg7528 You are completely ignorant of the history of mathematics if you think this. Historically, most major developments within maths came from the observation of certain patterns or motifs that were happening within a field, usually computational motifs. These larger-scale theorems were then developed as generalizations of these patterns. Modern education is unfortunately trash, even (especially due to the research focus) at top universities. A field being taught as a chain of theorems or definitions without the computational bedrock that lead to the development of those theorems leads to those same theorems being difficult to understand. It's a damn shame that there are no good functional analysis lectures on the internet, and that especially includes this one being quite bad as well.