HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

In mathematics, specifically in spectral theory, an eigenvalue of a closed linear operator is called normal if the space admits a decomposition into a direct sum of a finite-dimensional generalized eigenspace and an invariant subspace where A-\lambda I has a bounded inverse. The set of normal eigenvalues coincides with the discrete spectrum.


Root lineal

Let \mathfrak be a
Banach space In mathematics, more specifically in functional analysis, a Banach space (pronounced ) is a complete normed vector space. Thus, a Banach space is a vector space with a metric that allows the computation of vector length and distance between vector ...
. The root lineal \mathfrak_\lambda(A) of a linear operator A:\,\mathfrak\to\mathfrak with domain \mathfrak(A) corresponding to the eigenvalue \lambda\in\sigma_p(A) is defined as : \mathfrak_\lambda(A)=\bigcup_\\subset\mathfrak, where I_ is the identity operator in \mathfrak. This set is a
linear manifold In mathematics, an affine space is a geometric structure that generalizes some of the properties of Euclidean spaces in such a way that these are independent of the concepts of distance and measure of angles, keeping only the properties related ...
but not necessarily a vector space, since it is not necessarily closed in \mathfrak. If this set is closed (for example, when it is finite-dimensional), it is called the generalized eigenspace of A corresponding to the eigenvalue \lambda.


Definition of a normal eigenvalue

An eigenvalue \lambda\in\sigma_p(A) of a closed linear operator A:\,\mathfrak\to\mathfrak in the
Banach space In mathematics, more specifically in functional analysis, a Banach space (pronounced ) is a complete normed vector space. Thus, a Banach space is a vector space with a metric that allows the computation of vector length and distance between vector ...
\mathfrak with domain \mathfrak(A)\subset\mathfrak is called ''normal'' (in the original terminology, ''\lambda corresponds to a normally splitting finite-dimensional root subspace''), if the following two conditions are satisfied: # The algebraic multiplicity of \lambda is finite: \nu=\dim\mathfrak_\lambda(A)<\infty, where \mathfrak_\lambda(A) is the root lineal of A corresponding to the eigenvalue \lambda; # The space \mathfrak could be decomposed into a direct sum \mathfrak=\mathfrak_\lambda(A)\oplus \mathfrak_\lambda, where \mathfrak_\lambda is an invariant subspace of A in which A-\lambda I_ has a bounded inverse. That is, the restriction A_2 of A onto \mathfrak_\lambda is an operator with domain \mathfrak(A_2)=\mathfrak_\lambda\cap\mathfrak(A) and with the range \mathfrak(A_2-\lambda I)\subset\mathfrak_\lambda which has a bounded inverse.


Equivalent characterizations of normal eigenvalues

Let A:\,\mathfrak\to\mathfrak be a closed linear densely defined operator in the Banach space \mathfrak. The following statements are equivalent(Theorem III.88): # \lambda\in\sigma(A) is a normal eigenvalue; # \lambda\in\sigma(A) is an isolated point in \sigma(A) and A-\lambda I_ is semi-Fredholm; # \lambda\in\sigma(A) is an isolated point in \sigma(A) and A-\lambda I_ is Fredholm; # \lambda\in\sigma(A) is an isolated point in \sigma(A) and A-\lambda I_ is Fredholm of index zero; # \lambda\in\sigma(A) is an isolated point in \sigma(A) and the rank of the corresponding Riesz projector P_\lambda is finite; # \lambda\in\sigma(A) is an isolated point in \sigma(A), its algebraic multiplicity \nu=\dim\mathfrak_\lambda(A) is finite, and the range of A-\lambda I_ is
closed Closed may refer to: Mathematics * Closure (mathematics), a set, along with operations, for which applying those operations on members always results in a member of the set * Closed set, a set which contains all its limit points * Closed interval, ...
. If \lambda is a normal eigenvalue, then the root lineal \mathfrak_\lambda(A) coincides with the range of the Riesz projector, \mathfrak(P_\lambda).


Relation to the discrete spectrum

The above equivalence shows that the set of normal eigenvalues coincides with the discrete spectrum, defined as the set of isolated points of the spectrum with finite rank of the corresponding Riesz projector.


Decomposition of the spectrum of nonselfadjoint operators

The spectrum of a closed operator A:\,\mathfrak\to\mathfrak in the Banach space \mathfrak can be decomposed into the union of two disjoint sets, the set of normal eigenvalues and the fifth type of the essential spectrum: : \sigma(A)=\\cup\sigma_(A).


See also

*
Decomposition of spectrum (functional analysis) The spectrum of a linear operator T that operates on a Banach space X (a fundamental concept of functional analysis) consists of all scalars \lambda such that the operator T-\lambda does not have a bounded inverse on X. The spectrum has a standar ...
* Discrete spectrum (mathematics) * Essential spectrum * Fredholm operator * Operator theory *
Resolvent formalism In mathematics, the resolvent formalism is a technique for applying concepts from complex analysis to the study of the spectrum of operators on Banach spaces and more general spaces. Formal justification for the manipulations can be found in the fr ...
* Riesz projector * Spectrum (functional analysis) * Spectrum of an operator


References

{{SpectralTheory Spectral theory