Diameter 2 properties
Date
2015-05-19
Authors
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Publisher
Tartu Ülikool
Abstract
The thesis consists of a preliminary part and a main part, which has been
organized as follows.
Chapter 1 contains an introduction, where we explain our motivation
and the goal of the thesis, and present a brief overview of our starting
points. In addition to this narrative summary section, we describe the
notation.
In chapter 2, we recall some basic definitions and initial results. The
first section deals with the weak topology of a normed space and the weak*
topology of its dual space. We added this section because a student with
a solid first course in functional analysis may not have seen some results
mentioned here. This is followed by a section where we introduce the notion
of a slice. The essential concept of this master thesis is based on slices of
the unit ball. In the third section, we recall the term of an extreme point
and the Krein Milman theorem. The Choquet lemma is presented next,
this is used in our fifth section to prove the main result in this chapter
Bourgain's lemma.
Chapter 3 is the main part of this thesis. We start with the definitions
of the diameter 2 properties under consideration, and establish them for
classical spaces l, c0, L1[0; 1], and C0(K). It is known that Banach spaces
with the Daugavet property have the strong diameter 2 property. We will
verify this following the main idea but modifying slightly some details to
our liking.
Next we study how the diameter 2 properties are preserved by projective
tensor products and lp-sums of Banach spaces. A detailed proof is given
to the fact that the projective tensor product X^
Y of Banach spaces X
and Y has the local diameter 2 property whenever X or Y has the local
diameter 2 property. It is known that the (local) diameter 2 property is
stable by taking lp-sums for all 1 p 1. On the other hand, we show
that, for nontrivial Banach spaces X and Y , for all 1 < p < 1, the Banach
space X p Y cannot enjoy the strong diameter 2 property whether or not
X and Y have it.
We end this chapter by establishing the diameter 2 properties for M-
ideals. In fact, if Y is a strict M-ideal in X, then both Y and X have the
strong diameter 2 property. Thus, if X is an M-ideal in X**, then both X
and X** have the strong diameter 2 property. Finally, we show that if Y
is an M-ideal in X, then any diameter 2 property of Y is carried to X.
Description
Keywords
diameter 2 property, slice, Daugavet property, M-ideal