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functional analysis Functional analysis is a branch of mathematical analysis, the core of which is formed by the study of vector spaces endowed with some kind of limit-related structure (e.g. inner product, norm, topology, etc.) and the linear functions defi ...
,
compact operator In functional analysis, a branch of mathematics, a compact operator is a linear operator T: X \to Y, where X,Y are normed vector spaces, with the property that T maps bounded subsets of X to relatively compact subsets of Y (subsets with compact c ...
s are linear operators on Banach spaces that map bounded sets to
relatively compact set In mathematics, a relatively compact subspace (or relatively compact subset, or precompact subset) of a topological space is a subset whose closure is compact. Properties Every subset of a compact topological space is relatively compact (sinc ...
s. In the case of a Hilbert space ''H'', the compact operators are the closure of the finite rank operators in the uniform operator topology. In general, operators on infinite-dimensional spaces feature properties that do not appear in the finite-dimensional case, i.e. for matrices. The compact operators are notable in that they share as much similarity with matrices as one can expect from a general operator. In particular, the spectral properties of compact operators resemble those of square matrices. This article first summarizes the corresponding results from the matrix case before discussing the spectral properties of compact operators. The reader will see that most statements transfer verbatim from the matrix case. The spectral theory of compact operators was first developed by F. Riesz.


Spectral theory of matrices

The classical result for square matrices is the Jordan canonical form, which states the following: Theorem. Let ''A'' be an ''n'' × ''n'' complex matrix, i.e. ''A'' a linear operator acting on C''n''. If ''λ''1...''λk'' are the distinct eigenvalues of ''A'', then C''n'' can be decomposed into the invariant subspaces of ''A'' :\mathbf^n = \bigoplus _^k Y_i. The subspace ''Yi'' = ''Ker''(''λi'' − ''A'')''m'' where ''Ker''(''λi'' − ''A'')''m'' = ''Ker''(''λi'' − ''A'')''m''+1. Furthermore, the poles of the resolvent function ''ζ'' → (''ζ'' − ''A'')−1 coincide with the set of eigenvalues of ''A''.


Compact operators


Statement


Proof

;Preliminary Lemmas The theorem claims several properties of the operator ''λ'' − ''C'' where ''λ'' ≠ 0. Without loss of generality, it can be assumed that ''λ'' = 1. Therefore we consider ''I'' − ''C'', ''I'' being the identity operator. The proof will require two lemmas. This fact will be used repeatedly in the argument leading to the theorem. Notice that when ''X'' is a Hilbert space, the lemma is trivial. ;Concluding the Proof


Invariant subspaces

As in the matrix case, the above spectral properties lead to a decomposition of ''X'' into invariant subspaces of a compact operator ''C''. Let ''λ'' ≠ 0 be an eigenvalue of ''C''; so ''λ'' is an isolated point of ''σ''(''C''). Using the holomorphic functional calculus, define the Riesz projection ''E''(''λ'') by :E(\lambda) = \int _ (\xi - C)^ d \xi where ''γ'' is a Jordan contour that encloses only ''λ'' from ''σ''(''C''). Let ''Y'' be the subspace ''Y'' = ''E''(''λ'')''X''. ''C'' restricted to ''Y'' is a compact invertible operator with spectrum , therefore ''Y'' is finite-dimensional. Let ''ν'' be such that ''Ker''(''λ'' − ''C'')''ν'' = ''Ker''(''λ'' − ''C'')''ν'' + 1. By inspecting the Jordan form, we see that (''λ'' − ''C'')''ν'' = 0 while (''λ'' − ''C'')''ν'' − 1 ≠ 0. The Laurent series of the resolvent mapping centered at ''λ'' shows that :E(\lambda) (\lambda - C)^ = (\lambda - C)^E(\lambda) = 0. So ''Y'' = ''Ker''(''λ'' − ''C'')''ν''. The ''E''(''λ'') satisfy ''E''(''λ'')2 = ''E''(''λ''), so that they are indeed
projection operator In linear algebra and functional analysis, a projection is a linear transformation P from a vector space to itself (an endomorphism) such that P\circ P=P. That is, whenever P is applied twice to any vector, it gives the same result as if it wer ...
s or spectral projections. By definition they commute with ''C''. Moreover ''E''(''λ'')''E''(''μ'') = 0 if λ ≠ μ. * Let ''X''(''λ'') = ''E''(''λ'')''X'' if λ is a non-zero eigenvalue. Thus ''X''(''λ'') is a finite-dimensional invariant subspace, the generalised eigenspace of λ. * Let ''X''(0) be the intersection of the kernels of the ''E''(''λ''). Thus ''X''(0) is a closed subspace invariant under ''C'' and the restriction of ''C'' to ''X''(0) is a compact operator with spectrum .


Operators with compact power

If ''B'' is an operator on a Banach space ''X'' such that ''Bn'' is compact for some ''n'', then the theorem proven above also holds for ''B''.


See also

*
Spectral theorem In mathematics, particularly linear algebra and functional analysis, a spectral theorem is a result about when a linear operator or matrix can be diagonalized (that is, represented as a diagonal matrix in some basis). This is extremely useful be ...
*
Spectral theory of normal C*-algebras In functional analysis, every C*-algebra is isomorphic to a subalgebra of the C*-algebra \mathcal(H) of bounded linear operators on some Hilbert space H. This article describes the spectral theory of closed normal subalgebras of \mathcal(H). A su ...


References

* John B. Conway, A course in functional analysis, Graduate Texts in Mathematics ''96'', Springer 1990. {{Spectral theory Functional analysis Spectral theory