The Banach principle for ideal convergence in the classical and noncommutative context (Q2481928)
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English | The Banach principle for ideal convergence in the classical and noncommutative context |
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The Banach principle for ideal convergence in the classical and noncommutative context (English)
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15 April 2008
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The Banach principle is a classical result allowing the deduction of pointwise almost everywhere (a.e.) convergence of a given family of transformations acting on a Banach space from a similar convergence on a norm-dense subset of the domain. The authors consider both the commutative and noncommutative versions of the principle for convergence along an ideal (or a corresponding filter). The noncommutative version is formulated for a sequence of linear operators from a Banach space to the algebra of measurable operators affiliated with a semifinite von Neumann algebra with a faithful normal semifinite trace. In the Banach principle proved, both continuity and convergence is defined with respect to the ideal (of subsets of natural numbers) considered, only boundedness has to be assumed for the whole sequence of operators. Several interesting results of this type are also presented in the commutative context.
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Banach principle
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convergence with respect to an ideal
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noncommutative measure theory
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