Abstract
In this article, a-Browder’s classical theorem is considered through the property , and we show that if two operators are norm equivalent, then property holds for one if and only if it holds for the other. The necessary conditions for the difference of the spectrum and essential approximate point spectrum of the tensor product of two operators coincide with the product of differences between the spectrum and the essential approximate point spectrum of its two factors are investigated. We also discuss the necessary conditions for the tensor product of two operators to verify the property and simultaneously give the equivalence between their various spectra with their Browder spectrum, likewise with the Drazin spectrum.
MSC:
47A10; 47A11; 47A53
1. Preliminaries and Introduction
Let be the Banach algebra of all bounded linear operators on a complex Banach space We put the identity operator, and the resolvent of an operator is defined as where denotes spectrum of an operator which is defined as
The other classical spectra of such as the approximate point spectrum , surjective spectrum essential spectrum or Fredholm spectrum , Weyl spectrum , Browder spectrum , Drazin spectrum , upper semi-Fredholm spectrum , lower semi-Fredholm spectrum , upper semi-Browder spectrum essential approximate point or upper semi-Weyl spectrum and left Drazin spectrum are defined analogously to . In addition, we denote by and the ascent and descent of , respectively. See [] for more details.
Some spectra mentioned above have been generalized by Berkani et al. ([,,]). So, we have B-Weyl spectrum , upper semi B-Weyl spectrum , B-Fredholm spectrum and upper semi B-Fredholm spectrum . Recall that the upper semi B-Browder spectrum coincides with the left Drazin invertible spectrum, similarly the B-Browder spectrum coincides with Drazin spectrum, see [] or [].
There are several studies which give the relationship between some of the above mentioned spectra, but they do not give conditions for the spectra to coincide in a non-trivial way. Furthermore, an important breakthrough in operator theory is due to the fact that the various spectral properties are defined in a special way as a function of spectra, such as the classical Weyl’s theorem. We mention some of the notations and those properties to be used in this article.
For if then denotes the complement of in i.e., , and we denote by the set of isolated points in the set
- .
- .
Next, we recall the definition of some spectral properties.
Definition 1.
An operator is said to satisfy:
- Browder’s theorem [] , if
- a-Browder’s theorem [] , say , if
- Weyl’s theorem [] , if .
- Property [] , if .
- Property [] , say if
Recall that for every bounded operator is true, see ([], Proposition 50.2), and an operator is said to be a-polaroid if every point is a pole of the resolvent of , i.e., . In addition, it is denoted by , , the index of is defined by . So, is an upper semi-Weyl operator if and is closed. See [] for more details.
Remark 1.
By ([], Theorem 3.3) for , we have that
Note that by Theorems 6, 7 and 2 of [], we have the next theorem.
Theorem 1.
Let . If , then
- 1.
- .
- 2.
- .
The analysis of the spectrum of an operator has seen some development thanks to a powerful property called the single-valued extension property, introduced by Dunford and Schwarz in []. In fact, this property plays an important role in the Laursen and Neumann [] and Aiena [] books. Finch defines it in a local version in [].
Definition 2.
([]). An operator is said to have the single valued extension property at (abbreviated at ) if for every open disc centered at , the only analytic function which satisfies the equation
is f
The operator is said to have if it has at every point Evidently, every has at each point of the resolvent set From ([], Theorem 3.8), we have for that:
On the other hand, given Banach spaces and let be the tensor product of and as defined in []. The tensor product between two operators is defined as follows.
Definition 3.
([]). The tensor product of and on is the operator given by
The study of the tensor product between two operators has influence on spectral theory. The tensor product of two operators and its stability with respect to Weyl’s and Browder’s theorem were initiated by Kubrusly and Duggal in []. Then, Duggal [], Rashid [] and Rashid and Prasad [] continued these studies with Weyl and Browder type theorems. In addition, recently in [,] we can see a strong study linked to the tensor product of two operators.
The different spectra of the tensor product of two operators and are established as follows in [,] as follows:
- .
- .
- .
- .
- .
- .
Recall that the essential approximate point spectrum of for and verifies the spectral identity if
In this paper, we consider the property or equivalently a-Browder’s theorem. This has been studied through the methods of the local spectral theory, through localized , under a proper closed subspace of and also under some topological conditions and others. So, it has a lot of influence on the development of the spectral theory because the class of operators satisfying the property is stronger than the class of operators satisfying other properties, such as those seen in [,,].
In view of the many existing studies on a-Browder’s theorem, it is important to continue studying the property . Thus, for further development of operator theory, in this paper, combining local spectral theory with the properties of the tensor product of two operators, we give new results on the property . Namely:
In Section 2, taking into account that new partitions of the spectrum of an operator are always investigated, we show that the spectrum of an operator satisfying property can be partitioned into an essential approximate spectrum and a surjective spectrum. We also show that the spectrum of an a-polaroid operator satisfying property coincides with its approximate point spectrum, and the essential spectrum coincides with its upper semi-Fredholm spectrum.
In Section 3, since the question “are there infinite operators satisfying a-Browder’s theorem?” has not been answered, we prove that verifies property if and only if every nonzero scalar multiple of verifies property In particular, the same is true for the two operators that are norm equivalent. Thus, it is observed that there exist infinite in verifying a-Browder’s theorem.
In Section 4, in view of the fact that the relationships between the different spectra are always under research, assuming that the essential approximate point spectrum verifies the spectral identity for with and the necessary conditions for the equality to hold and further, for the tensor product of two operators satisfying the property , the Fredholm spectrum, the Weyl spectrum, the Browder spectrum, the upper Fredholm spectrum, the upper Weyl spectrum and the upper Browder spectrum to coincide with each other and the same for Berkani type spectra are investigated.
In Section 5, we list some conclusions.
2. On Spectra and the Property (Bv)
In this section, we give partitions of the spectrum of for operators that satisfy the property The approximate point spectrum equals the spectrum, and the upper semi-Fredholm spectrum equals the essential spectrum if is a-polaroid.
Aiena [] has shown that the spectrum of is the union of and surjective spectrum, i.e., where
Thus, we obtain the following Theorem.
Theorem 2.
If then .
Proof.
Let If then This implies that has at , i.e., Hence, and thus □
By Theorems 1 and 2, it results that if the interior of is empty, then the approximate point spectrum coincides with the union of the upper semi Browder spectrum and the surjective spectrum.
Corollary 1.
Let . If , then .
Next, we find a condition through Riesz operators for an operator to satisfy property .
Theorem 3.
Let If , for some Riesz operator such that , then .
Proof.
It is known that, see [],
By hypothesis we have that , whereby if then . Hence, , i.e., verifies a-Browder’s theorem, or equivalently . □
For an a-polaroid operator that satisfies property , we obtain that the approximate point spectrum becomes the spectrum, and the upper semi-Fredholm spectrum becomes the essential spectrum. Indeed,
Theorem 4.
Let be an a-polaroid operator. If then
- 1.
- .
- 2.
Proof.
1. By ([], Theorem 3.1), we have , or equivalently So, as and , we deduce that . By Theorem 1, we have that Hence, .
2. As in part 1., we have that . Since verifies property , it results that On the other hand, let .
If , then and hence
If , then Therefore, is both upper semi-Fredholm and lower semi-Fredholm; hence
So, in both cases and hence □
3. Property (Bv) and Norm Equivalent Operators
For , we define . Clearly,
We recall that an operator is Drazin invertible if there exists an operator (called the Drazin inverse of ) and an integer such that
Of conclusions in [], we deduce that for is Drazin invertible with Drazin inverse , it results that:
In [], the concept of equivalent norm operator was introduced and studied under linear operators with closed range. Two operators and in are said to be norm equivalent if there exist two positive real numbers and such that
In particular, the condition that for all and with was studied in detail. This condition implies equivalent norm.
In this section, we show that if are norm equivalent, then
In order to test the latter, in the following theorem we first show that a nonzero scalar multiple of an operator that verifies the property also verifies the property
Theorem 5.
Let and . Then,
- 1.
- 2.
- 3.
- if and only if .
Proof.
1. Let , observe that:
- (a)
- .
- (b)
- .
By part (b), we have that and by part (a) it turns out .
Thus, if , then and is closed, whereby and by part (b) we obtain that is closed. Hence, and so , we deduce that
Similarly, it results that . Therefore, .
- 2.
- In similar way to 1., we have that
Therefore, and so
- 3.
- If then , so By parts 1 and 2, We obtain that equivalently Hence . Similarly implies . □
Now, we can show that if and are norm equivalent, then iff .
Theorem 6.
Let such that for all and with two positive real numbers. Then, the following holds:
- 1.
- if and only if .
- 2.
- ⇒.
Proof.
1. By ([], Theorem 2.7), for some result that . Then, the result follows by Theorem 5 part 3.
2. Since implies , so by Theorem 2, it turns out that □
By Theorem 3, we obtain the following corollary.
Corollary 2.
Let If , for some Riesz operator such that , then , for each .
Remark 2.
It is already known that there are several classes of operators that satisfy a-Browder’s theorem. Then, by the results of the present section, we have that: there exist infinite such that , or the same , or verify a-Browder’s theorem.
4. Property (Bv) for Tensor Product
Throughout this section, we assume that and . Thus, we focus on obtaining the conditions that . This will make it possible to see the equality between the different spectra of . In addition, with an example of one of our main results, we show an important stability result with respect to the property under tensor product. Thus, we can test the stability of the various spectra for the tensor product.
Note that the set is not equal to in general. However, we do have an inclusion.
Theorem 7.
.
Proof.
Let the factorization of be such that and This implies that Hence it follows from the tensor product of upper semi-Browder spectrum identity that Therefore □
Next, we show that if the spectrum coincides with the approximate point spectrum for and then the equality holds in the above Theorem.
Theorem 8.
If and , then .
Proof.
By Theorem 7, it is sufficient to prove . Let Then thus for any factorization it results that and As and we have that and This implies that and That is Therefore, and so . □
Hereafter in the remaining part of this section, we assume that the essential approximate point spectrum verifies the spectral identity for .
In the following theorem, we discuss the necessary conditions for so that the equality becomes .
Theorem 9.
If such that and then .
Proof.
Assume , so and verify a-Browder’s theorem, whereby verifies a-Browder’s theorem, consequently . Thus:
By Theorem 8 it results that . Therefore, . □
Theorem 4 allows us to obtain the same result for a-polaroid operators in the class of operators verifying property
Theorem 10.
If are a-polaroid, then .
The following theorem establishes three equalities, whereby various spectral properties are satisfied for the tensor product , for example the property .
Theorem 11.
If are two a-polaroid operators, then:
- 1.
- .
- 2.
- .
- 3.
- .
Proof.
1. It is obtained by applying part (1) of Theorem 4.
2. Let By Theorem 4, we have Hence, Since the reverse inclusion is always true,
3. By hypothesis , so and verify a-Browder’s Theorem; by Theorem 4, we have that and , thus by ([], Theorem 3.2), we obtain that and verify property . We have assumed that
Therefore, by ([], Corollary 1) we obtain that . □
The following Theorem is the main result of this section which establishes the equality between the different spectra of .
Theorem 12.
If and , then:
- 1.
- .
- 2.
- . And
Proof.
1. By hypothesis, it results that , so by Theorem 1, we obtain that , and Hence, by Theorem 9 we obtain that and so ; by Theorem 1 we have that , or .
2. Let So and if it results that and Since and , we have that and . This implies that and Hence, . Therefore, By hypothesis, we conclude that . Hence, and the results follow by ([], Section 5). □
Corollary 3.
If and , then .
Proof.
As in the proof of part 2.-3. of Theorem 12, we obtain that , also By using Corollary 1, we obtain that . □
Example 1.
If and are two left m-invertible contractions such that , then is a pole of if and only if is closed (see [], for definition and details). On the other hand, for , it results that is closed; hence , whereby Hence, Theorem 12 applies to
Example 2.
If and are two quasi-nilpotent operators commuting with and , respectively. Then, by Corollaries and , of [], we have that , , , . Hence, and . Thus, if , then Theorem 12 applies to
5. Conclusions
- In general, spectrum of an operator can be written in the form of union of approximate point spectrum and surjective spectrum. We have shown that the spectrum of an operator verifying property coincides with the union of essential approximate point spectrum and surjective spectrum. See Theorem 2.
- For an a-polaroid operator the spectrum and essential spectrum coincide with the approximate point spectrum and upper semi-Fredholm spectrum respectively, if verifies property See Theorem 4.
- We have proved that any nonzero multiple of an operator satisfying property also satisfies property , and particularly if two operators are norm equivalent, then property holds for one if and only if it holds for the other. See Theorems 5 and 6. In addition, there exist infinite operators which verifies the Browder theorem, see Remark 2.
- Finally, we obtain that different spectra of the two-factor tensor product coincide when the interior of the difference between the spectrum and the upper semifredholm spectrum of each factor is empty. See Theorem 12.
Author Contributions
Conceptualization, E.A. and P.V.; methodology, E.A. and N.J.; supervision, E.A. and P.V.; writing—original, E.A. and N.J. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscriptt.
Funding
This research and APC was funded by Escuela Superior Politécnica del Litoral.
Acknowledgments
We thank Ramón Isidro Aponte Raga, RIP, for his encouragement and support in this work.
Conflicts of Interest
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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