Subprojective Banach spaces (Q481996): Difference between revisions
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English | Subprojective Banach spaces |
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Subprojective Banach spaces (English)
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19 December 2014
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A Banach space \(X\) is said to be subprojective if any of its infinite-dimensional subspaces contains a further infinite-dimensional subspace complemented in \(X\). The paper under review presents nice results on stability type properties concerning subprojectivity. Here are some of them. Let \(E, X_1, X_2, \ldots\) be Banach spaces with \(E\) possessing a \(1\)-unconditional basis. Then \((\sum_n X_n)_E\) is subprojective if and only if each of the spaces \(E, X_1, X_2, \ldots\) is subprojective. The subprojectivity is not a three-space property. Every subprojective space contains a subspace with an unconditional basis. There is a Banach space with an unconditional basis and without a subprojective subspace. The space of all bounded linear operators on an infinite-dimensional Banach space is not subprojective. Some results concern tensor products and twisted sums of subprojective Banach spaces.
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Banach space
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complemented subspace
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tensor product
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space of operators
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subprojective Banach spaces
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