Noncentral chi-squared distribution: Difference between revisions

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In [[mathematics]], an element ''z'' of a [[Banach algebra]] ''A'' is called a '''topological divisor of zero''' if there exists a [[sequence]] ''x''<sub>1</sub>,&nbsp;''x''<sub>2</sub>,&nbsp;''x''<sub>3</sub>,&nbsp;... of elements of ''A'' such that
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# The sequence ''zx''<sub>''n''</sub> converges to the zero element, but
# The sequence ''x''<sub>''n''</sub> does not converge to the zero element.
If such a sequence exists, then one may assume that ||''x''<sub>''n''</sub>||&nbsp;=&nbsp;1 for all ''n''.
 
If ''A'' is not [[commutativity|commutative]], then ''z'' is called a '''left''' topological divisor of zero, and one may define right topological divisors of zero similarly.
 
==Examples==
* If ''A'' has a unit element, then the invertible elements of ''A'' form an [[open set|open subset]] of ''A'', while the non-invertible elements are the complementary [[closed set|closed subset]]. Any point on the [[boundary (topology)|boundary]] between these two sets is both a left and right topological divisor of zero.
* In particular, any [[quasinilpotent]] element is a topological divisor of zero (e.g. the [[Volterra operator]]).
* An operator on a Banach space <math>X</math>, which is [[injective]], not [[surjective]], but whose image is dense in <math>X</math>, is a left topological divisor of zero.
 
==Generalization==
The notion of a topological divisor of zero may be generalized to any [[topological algebra]].  If the algebra in question is not [[first-countable space|first-countable]], one must substitute [[net (mathematics)|nets]] for the sequences used in the definition.
 
{{Unreferenced|date=January 2011}}
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Topological Divisor Of Zero}}
[[Category:Topological algebra]]
 
 
{{algebra-stub}}

Latest revision as of 02:19, 27 November 2014

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