An extension of Phelps theorem to spaces of vector-valued functions
Pith reviewed 2026-05-10 16:58 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Phelps' theorem extends to characterize norm-attaining functionals on C(Ω, X) when X* has the Radon-Nikodým property.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The authors prove that when X* has the Radon-Nikodým property, the norm-attaining functionals on C(Ω, X) admit a complete characterization extending the scalar case. They also investigate the points of norm attainment in the general case by considering continuity points of the map Id from the weak-star dual ball to the weak dual ball.
What carries the argument
The Radon-Nikodým property of X*, which enables the full characterization of norm-attaining functionals on the vector-valued function space.
If this is right
- Norm-attaining functionals on C(Ω, X) receive a complete description precisely when X* has the Radon-Nikodým property.
- For general X, norm attainment on C(Ω, X) occurs at points of weak*-to-weak continuity of the identity map on the dual unit ball.
- The extension connects scalar results to vector-valued continuous functions via the same norm-attainment framework.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- This may connect to questions about when the dual of C(Ω, X) has the Radon-Nikodým property itself.
- Analogous characterizations could be tested in other vector-valued spaces such as Bochner integrable functions.
Load-bearing premise
The dual space X* must have the Radon-Nikodým property for the complete characterization of norm-attaining functionals on C(Ω, X) to hold.
What would settle it
A concrete counterexample of a Banach space X without the Radon-Nikodým property in its dual, where the norm-attaining functionals on C(Ω, X) fail to satisfy the predicted characterization.
read the original abstract
In this paper, our main aim is to extend a classical theorem of Phelps on norm-attaining functionals from the space of scalar-valued continuous functions $C(\Omega)$ to its vector-valued counterpart $C(\Omega, X)$. One of our main results provides a complete characterization of norm-attaining functionals on $C(\Omega, X)$ under the assumption that $X^*$ has the Radon-Nikod\'ym property (RNP). For a general Banach space $X$, we further investigate norm attainment at points of weak$^*$-to-weak continuity for the identity map $Id : (C(\Omega, X)_1^*, w^*) \to (C(\Omega, X)_1^*, w)$.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper extends Phelps' classical theorem on norm-attaining functionals from the scalar space C(Ω) to the vector-valued setting C(Ω, X), where Ω is compact Hausdorff and X a Banach space. The central result is a complete if-and-only-if characterization of norm-attaining elements of C(Ω, X)* when X* has the Radon-Nikodým property, obtained by reducing to the scalar case via the Radon-Nikodým derivative of the representing vector measure; a secondary investigation treats norm attainment at points of weak*-to-weak continuity of the identity map on the unit ball of the dual.
Significance. If the main characterization holds, the work supplies a natural vector-valued analogue of Phelps' theorem that is likely to be cited in the literature on norm-attaining operators and vector measures. The RNP hypothesis is used precisely to guarantee differentiability of the representing measure, yielding a clean reduction rather than an ad-hoc construction. The secondary continuity result may also find applications in weak compactness arguments.
minor comments (4)
- §2, Definition 2.3: the notation for the representing measure μ_f is introduced without an explicit reference to the Riesz representation theorem for vector-valued measures; adding a short sentence citing the standard result would improve readability.
- Theorem 3.4 (the main characterization): the statement of the 'only if' direction would be clearer if the authors explicitly record that the point of norm attainment is chosen in the support of the scalar measure |μ_f| rather than merely in Ω.
- §4, paragraph following Proposition 4.1: the phrase 'weak*-to-weak continuity points' is used before it is formally defined; moving the definition one sentence earlier would avoid a minor forward reference.
- References: the bibliography lists the original Phelps paper but omits the 1970s follow-up by Bourgain on related norm-attainment questions; including it would strengthen the contextual placement.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the positive summary of our work, the assessment of its significance, and the recommendation for minor revision. No specific major comments were provided in the report, so we have no points to address point-by-point at this stage. We are prepared to incorporate any minor changes the editor or referee may suggest in the next version.
Circularity Check
No significant circularity detected
full rationale
The manuscript extends Phelps' classical theorem on norm-attaining functionals from scalar C(Ω) to the vector-valued setting C(Ω, X) by deriving a complete if-and-only-if characterization under the external hypothesis that X* possesses the Radon-Nikodým property. The argument proceeds by reducing the vector case to the scalar Phelps theorem through the RNP-induced Radon-Nikodým derivative of the representing vector measure, then verifying both directions of the characterization. This reduction invokes only the standard definition of RNP (an independent Banach-space property) and the known scalar result; no step defines the target characterization in terms of itself, renames a fitted quantity as a prediction, or relies on a load-bearing self-citation whose content is unverified outside the paper. The derivation remains self-contained against external benchmarks such as the scalar Phelps theorem and the definition of RNP.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (2)
- domain assumption X is a Banach space
- domain assumption X* has the Radon-Nikodým property
Reference graph
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