If each of the bonding maps is an embedding of TVSs then the LB-space is called a strict LB-space. This means that the topology induced on by is identical to the original topology on [1]
Some authors (e.g. Schaefer) define the term "LB-space" to mean "strict LB-space."
Definition
The topology on can be described by specifying that an absolutely convex subset is a neighborhood of if and only if is an absolutely convex neighborhood of in for every
If is a locally compact topological space that is countable at infinity (that is, it is equal to a countable union of compact subspaces) then the space of all continuous, complex-valued functions on with compact support is a strict LB-space.[3] For any compact subset let denote the Banach space of complex-valued functions that are supported by with the uniform norm and order the family of compact subsets of by inclusion.[3]
Final topology on the direct limit of finite-dimensional Euclidean spaces
Often, for every the canonical inclusion is used to identify with its image in explicitly, the elements and are identified together.
Under this identification, becomes a direct limit of the direct system where for every the map is the canonical inclusion defined by where there are trailing zeros.
Counter-examples
There exists a bornological LB-space whose strong bidual is not bornological.[4]
There exists an LB-space that is not quasi-complete.[4]
Adasch, Norbert; Ernst, Bruno; Keim, Dieter (1978). Topological Vector Spaces: The Theory Without Convexity Conditions. Lecture Notes in Mathematics. Vol.639. Berlin New York: Springer-Verlag. ISBN978-3-540-08662-8. OCLC297140003.
Bierstedt, Klaus-Dieter (1988). "An Introduction to Locally Convex Inductive Limits". Functional Analysis and Applications. Singapore-New Jersey-Hong Kong: Universitätsbibliothek: 35â133. Retrieved 20 September 2020.
Horváth, John (1966). Topological Vector Spaces and Distributions. Addison-Wesley series in mathematics. Vol.1. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley Publishing Company. ISBN978-0201029857.
Köthe, Gottfried (1983) [1969]. Topological Vector Spaces I. Grundlehren der mathematischen Wissenschaften. Vol.159. Translated by Garling, D.J.H. New York: Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN978-3-642-64988-2. MR0248498. OCLC840293704.