In mathematics, a topological algebra is an algebra and at the same time a topological space, where the algebraic and the topological structures are coherent in a specified sense.
Definition
A topological algebra over a topological field is a topological vector space together with a bilinear multiplication
- ,
that turns into an algebra over and is continuous in some definite sense. Usually the continuity of the multiplication is expressed by one of the following (non-equivalent) requirements:
- joint continuity: for each neighbourhood of zero there are neighbourhoods of zero and such that (in other words, this condition means that the multiplication is continuous as a map between topological spaces ), or
- stereotype continuity: for each totally bounded set and for each neighbourhood of zero there is a neighbourhood of zero such that and , or
- separate continuity: for each element and for each neighbourhood of zero there is a neighbourhood of zero such that and .
(Certainly, joint continuity implies stereotype continuity, and stereotype continuity implies separate continuity.) In the first case is called a "topological algebra with jointly continuous multiplication", and in the last, "with separately continuous multiplication".
A unital associative topological algebra is (sometimes) called a topological ring.
History
The term was coined by David van Dantzig; it appears in the title of his doctoral dissertation (1931).
Examples
- 1. Fréchet algebras are examples of associative topological algebras with jointly continuous multiplication.
- 2. Banach algebras are special cases of Fréchet algebras.
- 3. Stereotype algebras are examples of associative topological algebras with stereotype continuous multiplication.
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