Local boundedness may also refer to a property of
topological vector spaces, or of functions from a topological space into a topological vector space (TVS).
Locally bounded topological vector spaces A
subset B \subseteq X of a topological vector space (TVS) X is called
bounded if for each neighborhood U of the origin in X there exists a real number s > 0 such that B \subseteq t U \quad \text{ for all } t > s. A '''''' is a TVS that possesses a bounded neighborhood of the origin. By
Kolmogorov's normability criterion, this is true of a locally convex space if and only if the topology of the TVS is induced by some
seminorm. In particular, every locally bounded TVS is
pseudometrizable.
Locally bounded functions Let f : X \to Y a function between topological vector spaces is said to be a
locally bounded function if every point of X has a neighborhood whose
image under f is bounded. The following theorem relates local boundedness of functions with the local boundedness of topological vector spaces: :
Theorem. A topological vector space X is locally bounded if and only if the
identity map \operatorname{id}_X : X \to X is locally bounded. ==See also==