In mathematics, an LF-space, also written (LF)-space, is a topological vector space (TVS) X that is a locally convex inductive limit of a countable inductive system of Fréchet spaces. This means that X is a direct limit of a direct system in the category of locally convex topological vector spaces and each is a Fréchet space. The name LF stands for Limit of Fréchet spaces.
If each of the bonding maps is an embedding of TVSs then the LF-space is called a strict LF-space. This means that the subspace topology induced on by is identical to the original topology on . Some authors (e.g. Schaefer) define the term "LF-space" to mean "strict LF-space," so when reading mathematical literature, it is recommended to always check how LF-space is defined.
Throughout, it is assumed that
If it exists, then the final topology on in , also called the colimit or inductive topology in , and denoted by or , is the finest topology on such that
In the category of topological spaces, the final topology always exists and moreover, a subset is open (resp. closed) in if and only if is open (resp. closed) in for every index .
However, the final topology may <em>not</em> exist in the category of Hausdorff topological spaces due to the requirement that belong to the original category (i.e. belong to the category of Hausdorff topological spaces).
Suppose that is a directed set and that for all indices there are (continuous) morphisms in
such that if then is the identity map on and if then the following compatibility condition is satisfied:
where this means that the composition
If the above conditions are satisfied then the triple formed by the collections of these objects, morphisms, and the indexing set
is known as a direct system in the category that is directed (or indexed) by . Since the indexing set is a directed set, the direct system is said to be directed. The maps are called the bonding, connecting, or linking maps of the system.
If the indexing set is understood then is often omitted from the above tuple (i.e. not written); the same is true for the bonding maps if they are understood. Consequently, one often sees written " is a direct system" where "" actually represents a triple with the bonding maps and indexing set either defined elsewhere (e.g. canonical bonding maps, such as natural inclusions) or else the bonding maps are merely assumed to exist but there is no need to assign symbols to them (e.g. the bonding maps are not needed to state a theorem).
For the construction of a direct limit of a general inductive system, please see the article: direct limit.
Direct limits of injective systems
If each of the bonding maps is injective then the system is called injective.
If the 's have an algebraic structure, say addition for example, then for any , we pick any index such that and then define their sum using by using the addition operator of . That is,
where is the addition operator of . This sum is independent of the index that is chosen.
In the category of locally convex topological vector spaces, the topology on the direct limit of an injective directed inductive limit of locally convex spaces can be described by specifying that an absolutely convex subset of is a neighborhood of if and only if is an absolutely convex neighborhood of in for every index .
Direct limits in Top
Direct limits of directed direct systems always exist in the categories of sets, topological spaces, groups, and locally convex TVSs. In the category of topological spaces, if every bonding map is/is a injective (resp. surjective, bijective, homeomorphism, topological embedding, quotient map) then so is every .
Direct limits in the categories of topological spaces, topological vector spaces (TVSs), and Hausdorff locally convex TVSs are "poorly behaved". For instance, the direct limit of a sequence (i.e. indexed by the natural numbers) of locally convex nuclear Fréchet spaces may to be Hausdorff (in which case the direct limit does not exist in the category of Hausdorff TVSs). For this reason, only certain "well-behaved" direct systems are usually studied in functional analysis. Such systems include LF-spaces. However, non-Hausdorff locally convex inductive limits do occur in natural questions of analysis.
If each of the bonding maps is an embedding of TVSs onto proper vector subspaces and if the system is directed by with its natural ordering, then the resulting limit is called a strict (countable) direct limit. In such a situation we may assume without loss of generality that each is a vector subspace of and that the subspace topology induced on by is identical to the original topology on .
An inductive limit in the category of locally convex TVSs of a family of bornological (resp. barrelled, quasi-barrelled) spaces has this same property.
Every LF-space is a meager subset of itself. The strict inductive limit of a sequence of complete locally convex spaces (such as Fréchet spaces) is necessarily complete. In particular, every LF-space is complete. Every LF-space is barrelled and bornological, which together with completeness implies that every LF-space is ultrabornological. An LF-space that is the inductive limit of a countable sequence of separable spaces is separable. LF spaces are distinguished and their strong duals are bornological and barrelled (a result due to Alexander Grothendieck).
If is the strict inductive limit of an increasing sequence of Fréchet space then a subset of is bounded in if and only if there exists some such that is a bounded subset of .
A linear map from an LF-space into another TVS is continuous if and only if it is sequentially continuous. A linear map from an LF-space into a Fréchet space is continuous if and only if its graph is closed in . Every bounded linear operator from an LF-space into another TVS is continuous.
If is an LF-space defined by a sequence then the strong dual space of is a Fréchet space if and only if all are normable. Thus the strong dual space of an LF-space is a Fréchet space if and only if it is an LB-space.
A typical example of an LF-space is, , the space of all infinitely differentiable functions on with compact support. The LF-space structure is obtained by considering a sequence of compact sets with and for all i, is a subset of the interior of . Such a sequence could be the balls of radius i centered at the origin. The space of infinitely differentiable functions on with compact support contained in has a natural Fréchet space structure and inherits its LF-space structure as described above. The LF-space topology does not depend on the particular sequence of compact sets .
With this LF-space structure, is known as the space of test functions, of fundamental importance in the theory of distributions.
Suppose that for every positive integer , and for , consider X<sub>m</sub> as a vector subspace of via the canonical embedding defined by . Denote the resulting LF-space by . Since any TVS topology on makes continuous the inclusions of the X<sub>m</sub>'s into , the latter space has the maximum among all TVS topologies on an -vector space with countable Hamel dimension. It is a LC topology, associated with the family of all seminorms on . Also, the TVS inductive limit topology of coincides with the topological inductive limit; that is, the direct limit of the finite dimensional spaces in the category TOP and in the category TVS coincide. The continuous dual space of is equal to the algebraic dual space of , that is the space of all real valued sequences and the weak topology on is equal to the strong topology on (i.e. ). In fact, it is the unique LC topology on whose topological dual space is X.