Peano's theorem fails for infinite-dimensional Fréchet spaces (Q1335895)
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scientific article; zbMATH DE number 652163
| Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
|---|---|---|---|
| English | Peano's theorem fails for infinite-dimensional Fréchet spaces |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 652163 |
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Peano's theorem fails for infinite-dimensional Fréchet spaces (English)
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8 November 1994
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In 1975 A. N. Godunov proved that Peano's theorem does not hold for any infinite-dimensional Banach space. The first result of this paper says that if \(E\) is a nonnormable Fréchet space and \(\tau\) is an arbitrary topology consistent with the duality \((E,E')\) then there exists a continuous function \(f: E\to E\) such that the equation \(x'(t)= f(x(t))\) has no solution on any interval. The second result says that in a Fréchet space \(E\) we have: 1. Peano's theorem holds for \(E\Leftrightarrow E\) is finite- dimensional; 2. Peano's theorem holds for \(E\) with weak topology \(\Leftrightarrow E\) is normable and reflexive.
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Peano's theorem
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nonnormable Fréchet space
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0.9508783
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0.90571356
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0.8375548
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0.8286544
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0.82124794
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0.8196761
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