The most important sequence spaces in analysis are the spaces, consisting of the -power summable sequences, with the -norm. These are special cases of spaces for the counting measure on the set of natural numbers. Other important classes of sequences like convergent sequences or null sequences form sequence spaces, respectively denoted and , with the sup norm. Any sequence space can also be equipped with the topology of pointwise convergence, under which it becomes a special kind of Fréchet space called FK-space.
Theorem[1]—Let be a Fréchet space over . Then the following are equivalent:
admits no continuous norm (that is, any continuous seminorm on has a nontrivial null space).
contains a vector subspace TVS-isomorphic to .
contains a complemented vector subspace TVS-isomorphic to .
But the product topology is also unavoidable: does not admit a strictly coarser Hausdorff, locally convex topology.[1] For that reason, the study of sequences begins by finding a strict linear subspace of interest, and endowing it with a topology different from the subspace topology.
For , is the subspace of consisting of all sequences satisfying
If , then the real-valued function on defined by defines a norm on . In fact, is a complete metric space with respect to this norm, and therefore is a Banach space.
If then is also a Hilbert space when endowed with its canonical inner product, called the Euclidean inner product, defined for all by The canonical norm induced by this inner product is the usual -norm, meaning that for all .
If , then is defined to be the space of all bounded sequences endowed with the norm is also a Banach space.
If , then does not carry a norm, but rather a metric defined by
A convergent sequence is any sequence such that exists. The set of all convergent sequences is a vector subspace of called the space of convergent sequences. Since every convergent sequence is bounded, is a linear subspace of . Moreover, this sequence space is a closed subspace of with respect to the supremum norm, and so it is a Banach space with respect to this norm.
A sequence that converges to is called a null sequence and is said to vanish. The set of all sequences that converge to is a closed vector subspace of that when endowed with the supremum norm becomes a Banach space that is denoted by and is called the space of null sequences or the space of vanishing sequences.
The space of eventually zero sequences, , is the subspace of consisting of all sequences which have only finitely many nonzero elements. This is not a closed subspace and therefore is not a Banach space with respect to the infinity norm. For example, the sequence where for the first entries (for ) and is zero everywhere else (that is, ) is a Cauchy sequence but it does not converge to a sequence in
Convergence in has a natural description: if and is a sequence in then in if and only is eventually contained in a single image and under the natural topology of that image.
Often, each image is identified with the corresponding ; explicitly, the elements and are identified. This is facilitated by the fact that the subspace topology on , the quotient topology from the map , and the Euclidean topology on all coincide. With this identification, is the direct limit of the directed system where every inclusion adds trailing zeros: This shows is an LB-space.
The space of bounded series, denote by bs, is the space of sequences for which
This space, when equipped with the norm
is a Banach space isometrically isomorphic to via the linear mapping
The subspace consisting of all convergent series is a subspace that goes over to the space under this isomorphism.
The space or is defined to be the space of all infinite sequences with only a finite number of non-zero terms (sequences with finite support). This set is dense in many sequence spaces.
Substituting two distinct unit vectors for and directly shows that the identity is not true unless .
Each is distinct, in that is a strict subset of whenever ; furthermore, is not linearly isomorphic to when . In fact, by Pitt's theorem (Pitt 1936), every bounded linear operator from to is compact when . No such operator can be an isomorphism; and further, it cannot be an isomorphism on any infinite-dimensional subspace of , and is thus said to be strictly singular.
If , then the (continuous) dual space of is isometrically isomorphic to , where is the Hölder conjugate of : . The specific isomorphism associates to an element of the functional for in . Hölder's inequality implies that is a bounded linear functional on , and in fact so that the operator norm satisfies In fact, taking to be the element of with gives , so that in fact Conversely, given a bounded linear functional on , the sequence defined by lies in . Thus the mapping gives an isometry
The map obtained by composing with the inverse of its transpose coincides with the canonical injection of into its double dual. As a consequence is a reflexive space. By abuse of notation, it is typical to identify with the dual of : . Then reflexivity is understood by the sequence of identifications .
The space is defined as the space of all sequences converging to zero, with norm identical to . It is a closed subspace of , hence a Banach space. The dual of is ; the dual of is . For the case of natural numbers index set, the and are separable, with the sole exception of . The dual of is the ba space.
The spaces and (for ) have a canonical unconditional Schauder basis, where is the sequence which is zero but for a in the th entry.
The spaces can be embedded into many Banach spaces. The question of whether every infinite-dimensional Banach space contains an isomorph of some or of , was answered negatively by B. S. Tsirelson's construction of Tsirelson space in 1974. The dual statement, that every separable Banach space is linearly isometric to a quotient space of , was answered in the affirmative by Banach & Mazur (1933). That is, for every separable Banach space , there exists a quotient map , so that is isomorphic to . In general, is not complemented in , that is, there does not exist a subspace of such that . In fact, has uncountably many uncomplemented subspaces that are not isomorphic to one another (for example, take ; since there are uncountably many such 's, and since no is isomorphic to any other, there are thus uncountably many ker Q's).
Except for the trivial finite-dimensional case, an unusual feature of is that it is not polynomially reflexive.
For , the spaces are increasing in , with the inclusion operator being continuous: for , one has . Indeed, the inequality is homogeneous in the , so it is sufficient to prove it under the assumption that . In this case, we need only show that for . But if , then for all , and then .
ℓ2 is isomorphic to all separable, infinite dimensional Hilbert spaces
A sequence of elements in converges in the space of complex sequences if and only if it converges weakly in this space.[3] If is a subset of this space, then the following are equivalent:[3]
is compact;
is weakly compact;
is bounded, closed, and equismall at infinity.
Here being equismall at infinity means that for every , there exists a natural number such that for all .
Schur, J. (1921), "Über lineare Transformationen in der Theorie der unendlichen Reihen", Journal für die reine und angewandte Mathematik, 151: 79–111, doi:10.1515/crll.1921.151.79.