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arxiv: 2406.08319 · v3 · submitted 2024-06-12 · 🧮 math.FA

Classes of operators related to subnormal operators

Pith reviewed 2026-05-23 23:49 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.FA
keywords subnormal operatorsn-subnormal operatorssub-n-normal operatorsquasinormal operatorsweighted shiftsHilbert space operatorsoperator classes
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The pith

Sub-n-normality is strictly stronger than n-subnormality, and the weight sequence of any n-quasinormal unilateral weighted shift must be periodic with period at most n.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper defines n-subnormal operators and sub-n-normal operators as natural extensions of the class of subnormal operators on Hilbert space. It establishes inclusion relations with related classes such as n-quasinormal and quasi-n-normal operators. The central results are that sub-n-normality implies n-subnormality, with a concrete counterexample of a 3-subnormal operator that fails to be sub-2-normal, and that n-quasinormality on unilateral weighted shifts forces the weight sequence to be periodic of period at most n. These findings refine the hierarchy of operator classes beyond classical subnormality.

Core claim

The paper introduces the classes of n-subnormal operators and sub-n-normal operators. It proves that sub-n-normality is stronger than n-subnormality by exhibiting a 3-subnormal operator which is not sub-2-normal. It also proves that the weight sequence of an n-quasinormal unilateral weighted shift must be periodic with period at most n.

What carries the argument

The definitions of n-subnormal, sub-n-normal, n-quasinormal, and quasi-n-normal operators, together with the weight sequences of unilateral weighted shifts on Hilbert space.

If this is right

  • Sub-n-normality implies n-subnormality for every positive integer n.
  • The converse fails, since there exists a 3-subnormal operator that is not sub-2-normal.
  • The weight sequence of every n-quasinormal unilateral weighted shift is periodic with period at most n.
  • These new classes sit between subnormal operators and more general classes, forming a strict hierarchy.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The periodicity constraint on weights may restrict the possible spectra or reducing subspaces of n-quasinormal shifts.
  • The strict separation between sub-n-normal and n-subnormal classes suggests that intermediate normality conditions could be used to classify operators that are neither subnormal nor fully normal.

Load-bearing premise

The standard definitions and basic properties of subnormal, quasinormal, and weighted shift operators on Hilbert spaces continue to hold and are sufficient to support the new definitions and proofs.

What would settle it

A unilateral weighted shift whose weights are not periodic with period at most n but which satisfies the n-quasinormal condition for some n would falsify the periodicity theorem.

read the original abstract

In this paper we attempt to lay the foundations for a theory encompassing some natural extensions of the class of subnormal operators, namely the $n$--subnormal operators and the sub-$n$--normal operators. We discuss inclusion relations among the above mentioned classes and other related classes, e.g., $n$--quasinormal and quasi-$n$--normal operators. We show that sub-$n$--normality is stronger than $n$--subnormality, and produce a concrete example of a $3$--subnormal operator which is not sub-$2$--normal. In \cite{CU1}, R.E. Curto, S.H. Lee and J. Yoon proved that if an operator $T$ is subnormal, left-invertible, and such that $T^n$ is quasinormal for some $n \le 2$, then $T$ is quasinormal. in \cite{JS}, P.Pietrzycki and J. Stochel improved this result by removing the assumption of left invertibility. In this paper we consider suitable analogs of this result for the case of operators in the above-mentioned classes. In particular, we prove that the weight sequence of an $n$--quasinormal unilateral weighted shift must be periodic with period at most $n$.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

0 major / 2 minor

Summary. The manuscript introduces n-subnormal and sub-n-normal operators as extensions of subnormal operators on Hilbert spaces. It examines inclusion relations among these classes and related ones such as n-quasinormal and quasi-n-normal operators, proves that sub-n-normality is strictly stronger than n-subnormality via an explicit 3-subnormal operator that is not sub-2-normal, and shows that the weight sequence of an n-quasinormal unilateral weighted shift must be periodic with period at most n. The paper also considers analogs of results by Curto-Lee-Yoon and Pietrzycki-Stochel for these extended classes.

Significance. If the results hold, this work provides a coherent foundation for extending the theory of subnormal operators, with the periodicity result for weighted shifts serving as a direct generalization of known facts for quasinormal operators and the concrete counterexample furnishing a clear separation between sub-n-normality and n-subnormality. These contributions, resting on standard definitions from prior literature, could support further structural investigations in operator theory.

minor comments (2)
  1. [Introduction] The abstract references results from Curto-Lee-Yoon and Pietrzycki-Stochel; ensuring the introduction section explicitly recalls the precise statements of those theorems would improve readability for readers unfamiliar with the citations.
  2. [Section 2] Notation for the new classes (e.g., sub-n-normal) is introduced clearly in the abstract but would benefit from a consolidated table or diagram in Section 2 summarizing all inclusion relations discussed.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

0 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the positive review and the recommendation to accept the manuscript. The assessment accurately captures the main contributions regarding the introduction of n-subnormal and sub-n-normal operators, the separation via the explicit counterexample, and the periodicity result for weighted shifts.

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

Minor self-citation not load-bearing; derivations self-contained

full rationale

The paper defines n-subnormal, sub-n-normal, n-quasinormal and related classes from the standard definitions of subnormal and quasinormal operators on Hilbert space (as referenced from prior literature). The central results—the periodicity of the weight sequence for n-quasinormal unilateral weighted shifts (period ≤ n), the strict inclusion sub-n-normality stronger than n-subnormality, and the explicit 3-subnormal counterexample—are proved directly from these definitions and basic properties of weighted shifts. The citation to Curto-Lee-Yoon [CU1] (which shares an author) supplies background for the analog result but is not invoked as a load-bearing premise or uniqueness theorem inside the new proofs; no step reduces by construction to a fitted input, self-definition, or unverified self-citation chain.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 1 axioms · 0 invented entities

Paper relies on standard Hilbert-space operator theory; no free parameters, new physical entities, or ad-hoc axioms are introduced beyond the new class definitions themselves.

axioms (1)
  • domain assumption Standard definitions and closure properties of subnormal and quasinormal operators on Hilbert spaces hold as in the cited literature.
    Invoked throughout the abstract when extending the classes and stating inclusion relations.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5769 in / 1180 out tokens · 21218 ms · 2026-05-23T23:49:14.792396+00:00 · methodology

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Reference graph

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