The controlled separable projection property for Banach spaces (Q651279)

From MaRDI portal
Revision as of 00:41, 20 March 2024 by Openalex240319060354 (talk | contribs) (Set OpenAlex properties.)
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
The controlled separable projection property for Banach spaces
scientific article

    Statements

    The controlled separable projection property for Banach spaces (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    12 December 2011
    0 references
    The paper is devoted to studying the controlled separable projection property (abbreviated CSPP) in Banach spaces. A Banach space \(X\) is called a CSPP-space if for any separable subspaces \(Y\subset X\) and \(Z\subset X^*\) there is a projector \(P:X\to X\) with separable range \(P(X)\) such that \(Y\subset P(X)\) and \(Z\subset \mathrm{ker}(P)^\perp\). The class of CSPP-spaces contains all WCG-spaces and all WCD-spaces. One of the principal results is Theorem 1.2 saying that for a separable subspace \(U\) of a CSPP-space \(X\) the quotient Banach space \(X/U\) is CSPP. Moreover, the space \(U\) is complemented in some CSPP-subspace \(W\subset X\) with separable quotient \(X/W\). Another principal result is Theorem 1.1 treating quasi-quotients of CSPP-spaces, i.e., Banach spaces \(Y\) admitting a continuous linear operator \(T:X\to Y\) with dense range \(T(X)\subset Y\) defined on a CSPP-space \(X\). Theorem 1.1 says that each quasi-quotient space \(Y\) of a CSPP-space has the following properties (well-known for reflexive Banach spaces): (i) the space \(Y\) is separable if and only if its dual \(Y^*\) is weak\(^*\)-separable, (ii) the dual unit ball \(B_{Y^*}\) endowed with the weak\(^*\) topology is sequentially compact, (iii) every weak\(^*\)-separable subset of \(B_{Y^*}\) is weak\(^*\)-metrizable. In Section 2 the authors derive from Theorems 1.1 and 1.2 six corollaries. In the last section the authors study the CSPP in Banach spaces \(C(K_{\mathcal F})\) of continuous functions on the Mrowka space \(K_{\mathcal F}\) determined by an almost disjoint family \(\mathcal F\). They show that for a maximal almost disjoint family \(\mathcal F\) the Banach space \(C(K_{\mathcal F})\) fails the CSPP. Yet \(C(K_{\mathcal F})\) contains a subspace \(U\) such that both \(U\) and \(C(K_{\mathcal F})/U\) are isomorphic to \(c_0\)-spaces and hence have CSPP. This shows that CSPP (as well as the property of being a \(c_0\)-space) is not a three-space property (a Banach space is called a \(c_0\)-space if it is isomorphic to the space \(c_0(\Gamma)\) for some set \(\Gamma\)). The authors also find conditions on a disjoint family \(\mathcal F\) guaranteeing that the Banach space \(C(K_{\mathcal F})\) has CSPP.
    0 references
    0 references
    controlled separable projection property
    0 references
    weakly Lindelöf determined Banach space
    0 references
    Josefson-Nissenzweig sequence
    0 references
    separable quotient problem
    0 references
    Mrówka space
    0 references
    WCG-spaces
    0 references

    Identifiers

    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references