Exercises To "Applied Functional Analysis"
Exercises To "Applied Functional Analysis"
Exercises to Lecture 1
Here are some exercises about metric spaces. Some of the solutions can be
found in my own additional lecture notes on Blackboard, as the exercises are
just Lemmas in there. For the others one should always think of a proof in
Rd and then abstract to the general case. (The case of Rd is extensively dealt
with in LN, Chapter 2-4.)
Although none of the exercises is deep or complicated, I have put a star ∗ for
the ones which seem a bit more difficult than the others.
In all the following exercises, (Ω, d) always denotes a general metric space.
Exercise 5 Let (Ω, d), (Ω0 , d0 ) be two metric spaces and f : Ω −→ Ω0 a map-
ping. Show that the following assertions are equivalent.
(i) f is continuous.
(ii) For every U ⊂ Ω0 open in Ω0 its inverse image f −1 (U ) := {y ∈
Ω | f (y) ∈ U } is open in Ω.
d(x, A) := inf{d(x, a) | a ∈ A}
d(x, A) = 0 ⇒ x∈A
Here are some other notions from metric space theory that sometimes are used,
at least in the official lecture notes LN (see LN p.38).
Let A ⊂ Ω. The point x ∈ A is called an interior point of A if there is r > 0
such that Br (x) ⊂ A. Hence A is open if A consists entirely of interior points.
The point x ∈ Ω is called an accumulation point of A if every ε-
neighbourhood of x contains a point of A, different from x. Equivalently,
there is a sequence (xn )n ⊂ A with xn → x, and xn 6= x for all n ∈ N. (Can
you prove this?)
The official lecture notes (LN p.38) define the closure of A as the set consist-
ing of A united with all the accumulation points of A. Make sure that you
understand that this is the same as the definition I gave in the lecture.
Exercises 2 Applied Functional Analysis 3
Exercises to Lecture 2
Exercise 3 Let k·k1 and k·k2 be two norms on a vector space E, with asso-
ciated unit balls B1 , B2 , respectively. Show that the following assertions are
equivalent for some m > 0:
(i) kxk1 ≤ m kxk2 for all x ∈ E.
(ii) B2 ⊂ m B1 .
Exercise 5 Prove the two “calculus lemmas” used in the lecture to prove
Minkowski’s and Hölder’s inequality.
4 Applied Functional Analysis Exercises 4
Exercises to Lecture 3
Lecture 3 as I gave it covers the whole of LN Chapter 6 and Appendix B. You
can therefore solve each of the exercises in LN 6.4.
Comment to LN 6.4.2: I think you may give two different elements g, h. Please
note also that “motivate your answer” is nonsense. You can be motivated to
do something, but an answer cannot. (Motivation is a state of mind.) What
the text means is: justify your answer, give a reason for it, argue for it.
Here is a very simple exercise that is (in a less explicit form) in my lecture.
en (m) = 1 if n = m, en (m) = 0 if n 6= m.
And last, but nor least, please study the proof of the completeness of B(I)
given in LN 6.3.3. It is even simpler than what I did in the lecture, and you
are supposed to fabric such a proof by yourself!
Exercises to Lecture 4
First of all: do not be concerned about Chapter 7 of LN. It will come, I
promise!
Second: I plan to include a different proof of the Weierstrass theorem (LN
8.1.5), but I need some time for this.
Third: As most of the lecture is not official course material, you should defi-
nitely concentrate on solving the Assignment 1. Besides this you may do the
Exercises LN 8.3.1, part a), and LN 8.3.3. The other exercises of LN Chapter
8 are postponed.
Fourth: Do not bother about how Borel sets look like. They can be weird,
but I bet that practically every set you can possibly think of, is a Borel set.
(Not that I have a better brain, but although one can prove that there are
many many, non-Borel sets are more or less impossible to describe explicitely.
There is a branch of maths, “descriptive set theory” which deals with such
questions. As I said, do not bother too much.)
If you are keen to practice a bit the Lebesgue integration theory stuff, here
are some (elementary) exercises.
Exercises 4 Applied Functional Analysis 5
Exercise 1 Given that all open subset of R are Borel sets, show that all closed
subsets and all kinds of intervals are also Borel sets.
Exercise 2 Show that the finite additivity in the definition of Lebesgue mea-
sure is superfluous because it follows from the σ-additivity and the requirement
that λ(∅) = 0.
{f ≥ a} = {x ∈ I | f (x) ≥ a}
Exercise 4 Using the previous exercise, show that if f, g are measurable, then
also max{f, g} is measurable.
Exercises to Lecture 5
We now covered the whole Chapter 8 from LN, except Example LN 8.2.13,
which I shall do shortly. So in principle, you have all necessary information to
do the Exercises of LN 8.3. Exercise 8.3.9 is totally superfluous, so you might
skip it.
Here are some proposals for additional work.
Exercise 2 Show that if f ∈ L∞ (a, b), then |f (x)| ≤ kf kL∞ almost every-
where.
Exercise 3 Show that on C[a, b] the norm k·kL∞ coming from L∞ (a, b) is the
same as the uniform norm. Show that this is not true for other bounded
functions.
Exercises to Lecture 6
In the current lecture, I covered almost the whole of LN Chapter 7. What I
did not yet tell you is that two elements x, y of an inner product space are
called orthogonal if hx, yi = 0. You need this information to be able to solve
the exercises. In principle, you are now prepared to do all of them. However,
leave out LN 7.4.6.
Try also to read the section LN 7.3 about the “control problem”. (I shall not
treat this in my lectures for time reasons.) The following (simple) exercise is
the abstract principle behind LN 7.3.
Exercise 1 Let (H, h·, ·i) be an inner product space, and let 0 6= f ∈ H. Show
that
kf k = sup{hf, gi | g ∈ H, kgk = 1}
and the supremum is attained at g = f / kf k.
Exercise 2 Let H = L2 (−1, 1). Show that f := 1(0,1) does not have a weak
derivative in H. (Note: Considered within the space L2 (0, 1) it does have a
weak derivative. Which?)
Exercises 7 Applied Functional Analysis 7
Exercises to Lecture 7
(I apologize for the hurry, but it is really not my fault that the TUs decided
to put a four-hour material into a two-hour course.)
Exercise 1 Prove that if (ei )i∈I is a maximal ONS in a Hilbert space H then
X
hx, yi = hx, ei i · hei , yi
i∈I
8 Applied Functional Analysis Exercises 8
Exercise 3 Let (en )n∈N be a complete ONS in the Hilbert space H and let
(fi )i∈I be a second ONS. Prove that I is also countable.
With these in the back you should be able, in one way or another, to do the
last.
Exercises to Lecture 8
As I said in the lecture: we postpone LN Chapter 10. Lecture 8 covered
the whole of LN Chapter 11. So all exercises in LN 11.3 are suitable and
worthwhile your attention.
Exercises to Lecture 9
Now LN Chapter 10 is almost covered. What I did not do (yet) is: Integral
operators (LN 10.1.6, 10.2.7), Hilbert-Schmidt operators (LN 10.1.7), and the
notion of invertibility (LN 10.3.7, 10.3.8).
In principle all the exercises in LN 10.4 now accessible. In two cases you
need the definition of invertibility from 10.3.4: a linear mapping T : E −→ F
is called invertible if it is bijective, i.e., one-one and onto. I included that
definition in the additional lecture notes on page 76.
I unfortunately made a big mistake in the lecture when formulating the density
principle (Lemma 8). Please look carefully at the corrected version: you
cannot conclude the boundedness of T from the boundedness of T0 .
The following two exercises show that in the definition of the operator norm
kT k = sup{kT xk | kxk ≤ 1}
the supremum need not be a maximum! (The official lecture notes LN give a
simpler example, see LN 10.2.6 d).)
Show that ϕ is bounded with norm kϕk = 1. Then show that for every
0 6= f ∈ E one has |ϕ(f )| < kf k∞ .
10 Applied Functional Analysis Exercises 10
Exercises to Lecture 10
We covered LN Chapter 12 except for the part which deals with compact
operators. We will come to this later. You may do Exercises LN 12.4.1 -
12.4.4 and 12.4.8. (The rest is over compact operators.) For LN 12.4.8 I give
you a hint:
{A ∈ BL(E) | A is invertible}
and use the Neumann series to prove that S is invertible. What’s its inverse?)
Exercises to Lecture 11
I covered LN Chapter 13. However, I decided to replace LN 13.4 (the Galerkin
method) by the treatment of Poisson’s equation on an interval. This is due to
the fact that the material in LN 13.4.2 needs some information about H 1 (a, b)
which is still missing. And as you know by now, I do not like to cheat you
over the facts one is actually using.
Exercises LN 13.5 do not use the material of LN 13.4, and hence are all suitable
to work on. Here are two additional ones.
Exercise 1 Let 1 < p < ∞ and let q be its dual exponent. Show that (`p )∗ = `q
by means of the natural duality
X∞
(f, g) 7−→ f (n)g(n) : `p × `q −→ R.
n=1
Exercise 2 Let λ > 0 be fixed. Show that for every f ∈ L2 (a, b) there is
u ∈ H 2 (a, b) satisfying
(Mimick the arguments from Lecture 11: define a new (suitable) scalar product
on H01 (a, b) and then use the Riesz-Fréchet theorem.) Suppose that we knew
that C01 [a, b] is dense in H01 (a, b). Can we conclude that there is at most one
solution of the boundary problem?
12 Applied Functional Analysis Exercises 12
Exercises to Lecture 12
As I said in the lecture, I decided not to talk about complex Banach and
Hilbert spaces. There are several reasons for that. First, I would not be able
to do it in detail, and I do not like that since some things especially in the
Hilbert space case change if you do everything for complex scalars. Not so
much in the statements, but in the proofs. Then, I think that if you need
complex spaces in the future, you will have no difficulty to acquire the needed
knowledge on your own, as many standard books do it with complex scalars
right from the start. Last, the complex world is not needed for our goal, which
is the spectral theorem for compact self-adjoint operators on Hilbert spaces.
And I prefer to present some substantial things in our remaining time, and
not only technicalities.
Of course you are free to read a little in LN Chapter 14. And, of course, you
may very well look at the exercises in LN 14.3. Especially LN 14.3.6 - 14.3.8
are also meaningful in the real setting, and are recommended.
I covered the notion of compact operator, a thing from LN 12.3 that I had
skipped until now. My approach is a bit more general as in LN, but the most
difficult thing (the diagonal argument in the proof of the closedness of C(E, F ))
is also present in LN 12.3.5. Moreoevr, the definition of compcatness given in
LN is awkward, no serious book would define compactness like this.
If you know about the notion of compactness of a metric space, you may have
noticed that there is connection with compact operators. (This is the reason
for the name, of course.) But if you do not: never mind. It is not needed at
all. Our definition of compact operator is all that we need.
Exercise LN 12.4.5 and LN 12.4.6 are helpful, I think.
Exercises to Lecture 13
I covered in principle the material of LN Chapter 15, but kept the general
spectral theory much shorter. So it is worth-while to look at Examples LN
15.1.4, 15.1.8 and 15.2.3, 15.2.4, which are not included in my lecture notes.
The Exercises of LN 15.4 except for 15.4.6 (which is a speciality for complex
spaces) are all worth looking at. However, you will need the notion of a unitary
linear mapping on a Hilbert space from LN 14.2.5.
I attached an appendix in which it is shown that the only spectral values of
self-adjoint operators are approximate eigenvalues. The arguments are not
difficult. There the following general fact is needed.
Exercises to Lecture 14
In the last lecture I covered in principle the material from LN Chapter 16, but
skipped the so-called Fredholm alternative (LN 16.2). LN Example 16.1.7 is in
a complex-valued setting, so we could not treat this, but my examples on the
Poisson problem with different boundary conditions are an ample replacement.
LN Exercise 16.3.2 is included in the discussion of the norm of the integration
operator.
If you want to read LN Chapter 17, you are free to do that, but it is not
relevant for the exam.
Merry Christmas. And all the best for the exam and beyond!