\(\aleph\)-injective Banach spaces and \(\aleph\)-projective compacta (Q748335): Difference between revisions
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English | \(\aleph\)-injective Banach spaces and \(\aleph\)-projective compacta |
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\(\aleph\)-injective Banach spaces and \(\aleph\)-projective compacta (English)
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20 October 2015
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Summary: A Banach space \(E\) is said to be injective if for every Banach space \(X\) and every subspace \(Y\) of \(X\) every operator \(t: Y\to E\) has an extension \(T: X \to E\). We say that \(E\) is \(\aleph\)-injective (respectively, universally \(\aleph\)-injective) if the preceding condition holds for Banach spaces \(X\) (respectively \(Y\)) with density less than a given uncountable cardinal \(\aleph\). We perform a study of \(\aleph\)-injective and universally \(\aleph\)-injective Banach spaces which extends the basic case where \(\aleph=\aleph_1\) is the first uncountable cardinal. When dealing with the corresponding ``isometric'' properties we arrive at our main examples: ultraproducts and spaces of type \(C(K)\). We prove that ultraproducts built on countably incomplete \(\aleph\)-good ultrafilters are \((1,\aleph)\)-injective as long as they are Lindenstrauss spaces. We characterize \((1,\aleph)\)-injective \(C(K)\) spaces as those in which the compact \(K\) is an \(F_\aleph\)-space (disjoint open subsets which are the union of less than \(\aleph\) many closed sets have disjoint closures) and we uncover some projectiveness properties of \(F_\aleph\)-spaces.
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injective Banach spaces
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cardinality assumptions
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projective compacta
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