Dunford-Pettis Sets in The Space of Bochner Integrable Functions
Dunford-Pettis Sets in The Space of Bochner Integrable Functions
24l, 35 41 (1979)
Am
© by Springer-Verlag 1979
One question of long standing interest is whether the space L,(#,X) of Bochner
integrable functions has the Dunford-Pettis property if the Banach space X has the
Dunford-Pettis property. The lack of a characterization of weakly compact subsets
of LI(#,X ) has impeded a successful solution to this problem. In an attempt to
circumvent this difficulty we shall study those sets in LI(#,X) that are mapped into
norm compact sets by weakly compact operators on LI(#,X ). The paper opens
with a study of those sets in an arbitrary Banach space X that mapped into
relatively norm compact sets by all weakly compact operators on X. These sets are
called Dunford-Pettis sets. An internal characterization of Dunford-Pettis sets is
given. In the second section we give a rather general sufficient condition for a
subset of LI(#,X) to be a Dunford-Pettis set. It is then deduced that if X is a
Banach space with the Dunford-Pettis property and contains no copy of E1, then
LI(#,X) has the Dunford-Pettis property for all finite measures #. The third section
deals with specific sets in L~(#,X) that are known to be weakly compact and shows
that if X has the Dunford-Pettis property, then these specific sets are Dunford-
Pettis sets.
Throughout this paper (D, X, #) is a finite measure space and X and Y are
Banach spaces with duals X* and Y* respectively. The space of all bounded linear
operators from X to Y under the usual operator norm will be denoted by L(X, Y).
The space of #-Bochner integrable functions on D with values in X will be denoted
by L~(#,X). A subset M of L,(#,X) is called uniformly integrable if
~(~)-o
lim ! IIflld/z=0
uniformly in f s M.
* This work will constitute a portion of the author's Ph.D. thesis now in preparation at the
University of Illinois under the direction of Professor J. J. Uhl, Jr.
0025-5831/79/0241/0035/$01.40
36 K.T. Andrews
L Dunford-Pettis Sets
Definition. A bounded subset A of a Banach space X is called a Dunford-Pettis set
if for all Banach spaces Y every weakly compact operator from X to Y maps A into
a relatively norm compact set.
Since a Banach space X has the Dunford-Pettis property if and only if every
weakly compact operator from X to any other Banach space maps weakly
compact sets into norm compact sets, a Banach space has the Dunford-Pettis
property if and only if each of its weakly compact subsets is a Dunford-Pettis set.
One often reads in the literature that a space has the strict Dunford-Pettis property
if each of its weakly conditionally compact sets (i.e. a set A such that any sequence
in A has a weakly Cauchy subsequence) is a Dunford-Pettis set. Actually as is
pointed out in [-5, p. 177] and elsewhere, the strict Dunford-Pettis property and the
Dunford-Pettis property are identical properties. We shall use this fact freely. In
this regard we shall also use the following theorem of Odell and Stegall (see [8, p.
377]). Every Dunford-Pettis set is weakly conditionally compact.
A direct consequence of the Odell-Stegall theorem is the following fact.
A Dunford-Pettis set in LI(#,X) is bounded and uniformly integrable. To see why
this is true, note that ifMC=L~(p,X) is a Dunford-Pettis set, then it is bounded and
if it is not uniformly integrable an appeal to [5, p. 104] shows that it contains a
copy of the (~-unit vector basis, a set which is not weakly conditionally compact.
Proof Obviously a) implies b); to see that b) implies c), let (x*) be a weakly null
sequence in X*. Define an operator T :X-~c 0 by Tx = (x'x). Notice that the adjoint
T :~1 -~X* of T has action T*(c0 = ~ e,,x* for each c~= (~,) in fl. Accordingly T*
n=l
maps the closed unit ball of E1 into the absolutely convex null of the weakly
compact set { x * : n e N } . Hence T*, and therefore T, is a weakly compact operator.
Thus by hypothesis T(A) is relatively norm compact. By the well-known charac-
terization of relatively norm compact subsets of c o, this means
lim sup [x*(x)[ = 0 .
n x~A
that limt~
7 k , = y weakly but HTx.-y][ > 6 for all positive integers n. For each
positive integer n choose y* ~ Y* with ][y* t] < 1 such that y,*(Tx, - y ) > 6. Since Y* is
reflexive, by passing to a subsequence if necessary we can and do assume that (y*)
converges weakly to some y*e Y*. Hence lim T * ( y * - y * ) = O weakly and so by
n
hypothesis
0 = lim T*(y* - y*)(x,) = lim (y* - y*)T%.
for all ~z6#1 and for all f ~ LI(P,X ). Consulting the proof of this theorem in [6, pp.
263-280] one finds that without loss of generality we can and do assume
g(o~)(x)C=T { f : f e LI(/2,X ), }lfl/1 =<1 } (1)
for all (o~2 and x ~ X with Hxt[< 1
Since ( T f ) , = ~ #,,fdfa for f e M , there are positive integers n 1 < n 2 < ..,-<nj < . . .
12
and a sequence (fj) in M such that
5ag.,fjd # >e
for some e > 0 and all j = 1,2 ..... By the uniform integrability of M choose 3 > 0
such that/,(F) <6 implies
5 I[flld/~< e
F 211TII
for all feM. Choose a set EeS with #(E)<6 such that for each co$E there is a
Dunford-Pettis set D(c0) with f(co)eD(co) for all f e M . Then since limg.,(o))=0
J
weakly Theorem 1 guarantees that lim g.j(a))fj(o)=0 for o)¢E. Since the sequence
J
(g,,(c0)fj(o)) is a uniformly integrable sequence, the Vitali convergence theorem
ensures that lira I [g,,fjld#=0. Hence for j sufficiently large I Ig.Jjld#<E/2.
J ~\E ~\E
But then
fg./,d, =<!lg.,s, la + ~ f\ E
< sup IIg.,ll~ sup 5 tlfjl[d/~+ 5 Jg.,fjld#
J J E ~\E
< IlZtl ~ t l ~ + ~ / 2 = g ,
and
f(A~, s) C 1,1,;. (2)
Then M is a Dunford-Pettis set.
Proof. Consider the set
M~ = {f)~A,., :fG M } .
Since M s is L~(#,X) bounded it is uniformly integrable and if geM~, then
g(f2)c= W~w{0}, a set which is evidently weakly conditionally compact. Since X has
the Dunford-Pettis property, the set W~w{0} is a Dunford-Pettis set. By Theorem
2, the set M s is a Dunford-Pettis set. Since l l f - f)~A~~llx <e for all f in M and e > 0
is arbitrary it follows quickly that M is a Dunford'Pettis set. This completes the
proof.
The problem of whether La(#,X) has the Dunford-Pettis property whenever X
has the Dunford-Pettis property is open. Bourgain [1] has shown that for an
arbitrary Banach space X the sets M in L:(Iz, X) having the property described in
the hypothesis of Corollary 3 are weakly conditionally compact. He also shows
that the converse fails for some Banach spaces but holds for spaces not containing
{1. In any case Corollary 3 is in harmony with the possibility that LI(p,X) has the
Dunford-Pettis property whenever X has the Dunford-Pettis property. For
Banach spaces containing no copy of f~ we can make a contribution to this
problem.
Corollary 4. Let X have the Dunford-Pettis property and suppose X contains no
copy of E:. A subset of Ll(p,X ) is a Dunford-Pettis set if and only if it is bounded
and uniformly integrable. Consequently the space L:(p,X) has the Dunford-Pettis
property.
Proof We have already seen that a Dunford-Pettis set in La(p,X) is bounded and
uniformly integrable.
To prove the converse suppose MCLI(p,X) is bounded and uniformly
integrable. It follows that
lira o[ IlflIdp=O
n [llfi} > n ]
.[ llflld~<e
[lloqt> not
for all f e M .
40 K.T. Andrews
/!i..
Then since X has the Dunford-Pettis property, each of the relatively weakly
compact sets D(~o) is a Dunford-Pettis set. An appeal to Theorem 2 reveals that M;
is a Dunford-Pettis set.
Dunford-Pettis Sets 41
Acknowledgement. The author is grateful to Professors N. J. Kalton and H. P. Rosenthal for helpful
discussions concerning this paper and to Professor J. J. Uhl, Jr. for his constant advice and
encouragement during its preparation.
References
1. Bourgain, J. : An averaging result for El-sequences and application to weakly conditionally compact
sets in LI(#,X ) (preprint)
2. Brooks, J.K., Dinculeanu, N. : Weak compactness in the space of Bochner integrable functions and
applications. Advances in Math. 24, t72-188 (1977)
3. Davis, W.J, Figiel, T., Johnson, W.B., Pelczynski, A. : Factoring weakly compact operators. J. Funct.
Anal. 17, 311-327 (1974)
4. Diestel, J. : Remarks on weak compactness in LI(#,X ). Glasgow Math. J. 18, 87-91 (1977)
5. Diestel, J., Uht, J.J.,Jr. : Vector measures. Math. Surveys No. 15, American Mathematics Society,
Providence 1977
6. Dinculeanu, N. : Vector measures. New York : Pergamon Press 1967
7. Rosenthal, H.P.: A characterization of Banach spaces containing/1. Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. USA 71,
2411-2413 (1974)
8. Rosenthal, H.P.: Pointwise compact subsets of the first Baire class. Amer. J. Math. 99, 362 378
(1977)
Added in prooL S. S. Khurana has recently obtained an independent proof of the final statement of
Corollary 4. We also note that an easy application of Theorem 2 yields the result that if X has the
Dunford-Pettis property then the space of absolutely summable X-valued sequences (1(X) has this
property.