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In functional analysis, the concept of the spectrum of an operator is a generalisation of the concept of eigenvalues, which is much more useful in the case of operators on infinite-dimensional spaces. For example, the bilateral shift operator on the Hilbert space has no eigenvalues at all; but we shall see below that any bounded linear operator on a complex Banach space must have non-empty spectrum.
The study of the properties of spectra is known as spectral theory.
Let X be a complex Banach space, and B(X) the Banach algebra of bounded linear operators on X. Then if I denotes the identity operator, and T ∈ B(X) then the spectrum of T (normally written as σ(T) ) consists of λ such that λ I - T is not invertible in the algebra of bounded linear operators on X. Note that by the closed graph theorem, this condition is equivalent to asserting λ I - T fails to be bijective.
Theorem: The spectrum is non-empty, bounded, and closed.
Proof: Suppose the spectrum is empty; then the function R(λ) = (λI - T)-1 is defined everywhere on the complex plane. So if Φ is any linear functional on B(X), F(λ) = Φ(R(λ)) is a continuous function . It is not hard to see that
so F is an analytic function. However, F(λ) is O(λ-1) for large λ so F is a bounded analytic function, and hence constant by Liouville's theoremLiouville's theorem has various meanings: In complex analysis, see Liouville's theorem (complex analysis). In Hamiltonian mechanics, see Liouville's theorem (Hamiltonian). In number theory, the theorem that any Liouville number is transcendental, or the l, and thus everywhere zero as it is zero at infinity. However, by the Hahn-Banach theoremFunctional analysis Theorems In mathematics, the Hahn-Banach theorem is a central tool in functional analysis. It allows one to extend linear operators defined on a subspace of some vector space to the whole space, and it also shows that there are "enough this implies that R(λ) is zero for all λ, which is obviously a contradiction.
The boundedness of the spectrum is immediate from the Neumann series expansion (named after the GermanThe word German can mean: From or related to Germany or its predecessor states see also the German language Germanic tribes Holy Roman Empire ( 843- 1806) German Confederation ( 1815- 1866) North German Confederation ( 1867 1871) German Empire ( 1871- 191 mathematician Carl NeumannCarl Gottfried Neumann was a German Mathematician, born May 7, 1832 in Konigsberg (now Kaliningrad, Russia) and died March 27, 1925 in Leipzig. Neumann worked on the Dirichlet principle, and can be considered one of the initiators of the theory of integra),
which is valid for any A ∈ B(X) with ||A|| < 1. This implies that if |λ| > ||T||, (λ I - T) is invertible (taking A = T/λ). So σ(T) is bounded, and the spectral radius
is bounded above by ||T||.
Furthermore, the Neumann series implies that for any two operators A, B with A invertible and ||A - B|| < ||A-1||-1, B must also be invertible. So the set of invertible operators is open, and hence, since the function defined by is continuous, the set of λ for which λ I - T is invertible is open, so its complement is closed; but this complement is exactly σ(T).