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JOURNALS // Fundamentalnaya i Prikladnaya Matematika // Archive

Fundam. Prikl. Mat., 1997 Volume 3, Issue 1, Pages 37–45 (Mi fpm204)

The First International School "Functional Analysis, Differential Equations and Their Application" Puebla (Mexico), May 18--23, 1995

Polynomial continuity

J. Llavona

Carlos III University of Madrid

Abstract: A mapping $f\colon\,X\to Y$ between Banach spaces $X$ and $Y$ is said to be polynomially continuous ($P$-continuous, for short) if its restriction to any bounded set is uniformly continuous for the weak polynomial topology, i.e., for every $\varepsilon>0$ and bounded $B\subset X$, there are a finite set $\{p_1,\ldots,p_n\}$ of polynomials on $X$ and $\delta>0$ so that $\|f(x)-f(y)\|<\varepsilon$ whenever $x,y\in B$ satisfy $|p_j(x-y)|<\delta$ $(1\leq j\leq n)$. Every compact (linear) operator is $P$-continuous. The spaces $L^\infty [0,1]$, $L^1[0,1]$ and $C[0,1]$, for example, admit polynomials which are not $P$-continuous. We prove that every $P$-continuous operator is weakly compact and that for every $k\in\mathbb N$ $(k\geq2)$ there is a $k$-homogeneous scalar valued polynomial on $\ell_1$ which is not $P$-continuous. We also characterize the spaces for which uniform continuity and $P$-continuity coincide, as those spaces admitting a separating polynomial. Other properties of $P$-continuous polynomials are investigated.

UDC: 517.98

Received: 01.04.1996



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