Properties of an infinite dimensional Banach space over the field with two elements
Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 14:30 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
There exists an infinite-dimensional Banach space over GF(2) where every bounded linear operator attains its norm.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Over the field GF(2), an infinite-dimensional Banach space X can be constructed so that for every bounded linear operator T acting on X there exists a unit vector z with ||Tz|| equal to the operator norm of T.
What carries the argument
A complete norm on an infinite-dimensional vector space over GF(2) engineered so that the unit sphere meets the image of every operator at its maximum value.
If this is right
- Every bounded operator on the constructed space reaches its supremum on the unit sphere.
- The attainment property holds for the identity and all multiples in this setting.
- Completeness is preserved while the discrete field structure eliminates gaps that prevent attainment over infinite fields.
- The space provides a concrete model where the Ostrovskii question receives a positive answer.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The construction may extend to other finite fields of characteristic two if the same norm pattern can be replicated.
- Finite-dimensional subspaces inherit the attainment property automatically, suggesting a possible inductive build-up.
- Operator algebras on this space become strictly smaller in their possible behaviors compared with real Banach spaces.
Load-bearing premise
A complete norm can be defined on an infinite-dimensional space over GF(2) that simultaneously forces every bounded operator to attain its norm.
What would settle it
An explicit infinite-dimensional GF(2)-Banach space together with one bounded operator that fails to attain its norm on any unit vector, or a proof that no complete norm with the attainment property exists.
read the original abstract
A banach space X is a normed vector space, which is complete with respect to the metric induced by the norm. Given a bounded linear operator T acting on a banach space X, T is said to attain its norm if there is a unit vector z in X, such that the norm of Tz equals the norm of T. The existence of an infinite dimensional banach space X, in which each bounded linear operator acting on X attains its norm, is still undetermined. This question was posed by M.I. Ostrovskii at St. John's University. In this paper we show that if an infinite dimensional banach space is considered over GF(2), then it is possible for every bounded linear operator to attain its norm.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper constructs an infinite-dimensional Banach space X over the field GF(2) in which every bounded linear operator attains its norm. It takes X to be the space of finitely supported sequences in GF(2)^N equipped with the Hamming-weight norm ||x|| equal to the number of 1's in the support of x. The manuscript verifies that this norm satisfies the axioms, that (X,||·||) is complete (Cauchy sequences are eventually constant), and that for any bounded linear T:X→X the operator norm equals max_n ||T e_n|| and is attained at a standard basis vector e_n.
Significance. If the result holds, the paper supplies an explicit, parameter-free construction that affirmatively resolves Ostrovskii's question over GF(2). The argument relies only on the subadditivity of Hamming weight and the fact that the unit sphere consists exactly of the basis vectors; this yields a clean, machine-checkable verification that every bounded operator attains its norm. The example is noteworthy because the same property remains open over R or C.
minor comments (2)
- The abstract and introduction should explicitly state that the norm takes values in the non-negative integers and that the unit sphere is precisely the set of standard basis vectors; this makes the attainment argument immediate.
- A brief remark on why the same construction fails to produce a Banach space over R (or why the question remains open there) would help readers situate the result.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the careful reading and positive recommendation to accept the manuscript. The provided summary correctly describes the space, the norm, completeness, and the attainment property.
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; explicit construction is self-contained
full rationale
The paper establishes an existence claim by direct construction of the space as the countable direct sum of GF(2) with the Hamming-weight norm. Completeness follows immediately from distances being nonnegative integers (Cauchy sequences stabilize), and the norm-attainment property for operators follows from subadditivity reducing the operator norm to the maximum on basis vectors, which is attained by definition. No equations reduce to self-definition, no parameters are fitted and relabeled as predictions, and no load-bearing steps rely on self-citations or imported uniqueness theorems. The derivation uses only the field axioms, norm axioms, and completeness over the discrete metric, remaining independent of the target result.
discussion (0)
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