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Compact embedding
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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In mathematics, the notion of being compactly embedded expresses the idea that one set or space is "well contained" inside another. There are versions of this concept appropriate to general topology and functional analysis. The notation for " is compactly embedded in " is , or .
When used in functional analysis, compact embedding is usually about Banach spaces of functions.
Several of the Sobolev embedding theorems are compact embedding theorems.
When an embedding is not compact, it may possess a related, but weaker, property of cocompactness.
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Definition
Topological spaces
Let be a topological space, and let and be subsets of . We say that is compactly embedded in if
Equivalently, it states that there exists some compact set , such that .
Normed spaces
Let and be two normed vector spaces with norms and respectively, and suppose that . We say that is compactly embedded in , if
- is continuously embedded in ; i.e., there is a constant such that for all in ; and
- The embedding of into is a compact operator: any bounded set in is totally bounded in , i.e. every sequence in such a bounded set has a subsequence that is Cauchy in the norm .
Banach spaces
If is a Banach space, an equivalent definition is that the embedding operator (the identity) is a compact operator.
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References
- Adams, Robert A. (1975). Sobolev Spaces. Boston, MA: Academic Press. ISBN 978-0-12-044150-1.
- Evans, Lawrence C. (1998). Partial differential equations. Providence, RI: American Mathematical Society. ISBN 0-8218-0772-2.
- Renardy, M. & Rogers, R. C. (1992). An Introduction to Partial Differential Equations. Berlin: Springer-Verlag. ISBN 3-540-97952-2.
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