Weak convergence (Hilbert space)

{{Short description|Type of convergence in Hilbert spaces}}

{{onesource|date=December 2009}}

In mathematics, weak convergence in a Hilbert space is the convergence of a sequence of points in the weak topology.

Definition

A sequence of points (x_n) in a Hilbert space H is said to converge weakly to a point x in H if

:\lim_{n\to\infty}\langle x_n,y \rangle = \langle x,y \rangle

for all y in H. Here, \langle \cdot, \cdot \rangle is understood to be the inner product on the Hilbert space. The notation

:x_n \rightharpoonup x

is sometimes used to denote this kind of convergence.{{Cite web |title=redirect |url=https://dept.math.lsa.umich.edu/ |access-date=2024-09-17 |website=dept.math.lsa.umich.edu}}

Properties

  • If a sequence converges strongly (that is, if it converges in norm), then it converges weakly as well.
  • Since every closed and bounded set is weakly relatively compact (its closure in the weak topology is compact), every bounded sequence x_n in a Hilbert space H contains a weakly convergent subsequence. Note that closed and bounded sets are not in general weakly compact in Hilbert spaces (consider the set consisting of an orthonormal basis in an infinite-dimensional Hilbert space which is closed and bounded but not weakly compact since it doesn't contain 0). However, bounded and weakly closed sets are weakly compact so as a consequence every convex bounded closed set is weakly compact.
  • As a consequence of the principle of uniform boundedness, every weakly convergent sequence is bounded.
  • The norm is (sequentially) weakly lower-semicontinuous: if x_n converges weakly to x, then

::\Vert x\Vert \le \liminf_{n\to\infty} \Vert x_n \Vert,

:and this inequality is strict whenever the convergence is not strong. For example, infinite orthonormal sequences converge weakly to zero, as demonstrated below.

  • If x_n \to x weakly and \lVert x_n \rVert \to \lVert x \rVert, then x_n \to x strongly:

::\langle x - x_n, x - x_n \rangle = \langle x, x \rangle + \langle x_n, x_n \rangle - \langle x_n, x \rangle - \langle x, x_n \rangle \rightarrow 0.

  • If the Hilbert space is finite-dimensional, i.e. a Euclidean space, then weak and strong convergence are equivalent.

=Example=

Image:Sinfrequency.jpg

The Hilbert space L^2[0, 2\pi] is the space of the square-integrable functions on the interval [0, 2\pi] equipped with the inner product defined by

:\langle f,g \rangle = \int_0^{2\pi} f(x)\cdot g(x)\,dx,

(see Lp space). The sequence of functions f_1, f_2, \ldots defined by

:f_n(x) = \sin(n x)

converges weakly to the zero function in L^2[0, 2\pi], as the integral

:\int_0^{2\pi} \sin(n x)\cdot g(x)\,dx.

tends to zero for any square-integrable function g on [0, 2\pi] when n goes to infinity, which is by Riemann–Lebesgue lemma, i.e.

:\langle f_n,g \rangle \to \langle 0,g \rangle = 0.

Although f_n has an increasing number of 0's in [0,2 \pi] as n goes to infinity, it is of course not equal to the zero function for any n. Note that f_n does not converge to 0 in the L_\infty or L_2 norms. This dissimilarity is one of the reasons why this type of convergence is considered to be "weak."

=Weak convergence of orthonormal sequences=

Consider a sequence e_n which was constructed to be orthonormal, that is,

:\langle e_n, e_m \rangle = \delta_{mn}

where \delta_{mn} equals one if m = n and zero otherwise. We claim that if the sequence is infinite, then it converges weakly to zero. A simple proof is as follows. For xH, we have

: \sum_n | \langle e_n, x \rangle |^2 \leq \| x \|^2 (Bessel's inequality)

where equality holds when {en} is a Hilbert space basis. Therefore

: | \langle e_n, x \rangle |^2 \rightarrow 0 (since the series above converges, its corresponding sequence must go to zero)

i.e.

: \langle e_n, x \rangle \rightarrow 0 .

Banach–Saks theorem

The Banach–Saks theorem states that every bounded sequence x_n contains a subsequence x_{n_k} and a point x such that

:\frac{1}{N}\sum_{k=1}^N x_{n_k}

converges strongly to x as N goes to infinity.

Generalizations

{{See also|Weak topology|Weak topology (polar topology)}}

The definition of weak convergence can be extended to Banach spaces. A sequence of points (x_n) in a Banach space B is said to converge weakly to a point x in B if

f(x_n) \to f(x)

for any bounded linear functional f defined on B, that is, for any f in the dual space B'. If B is an Lp space on \Omega and p<+\infty, then any such f has the form

f(x) = \int_{\Omega} x\,y\,d\mu

for some y\in\,L^q(\Omega), where \mu is the measure on \Omega and \frac{1}{p}+\frac{1}{q}=1 are conjugate indices.

In the case where B is a Hilbert space, then, by the Riesz representation theorem,

f(\cdot) = \langle \cdot,y \rangle

for some y in B, so one obtains the Hilbert space definition of weak convergence.

See also

  • {{annotated link|Dual topology}}
  • Operator topologies – topologies on the set of operators on a Hilbert space

References

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{{Banach spaces}}

{{Hilbert space}}

{{Functional analysis}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Weak Convergence (Hilbert Space)}}

Category:Convergence (mathematics)

Category:Hilbert spaces