Eduardo
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Homework Statement
Show that the range \mathcal{R}(T) of a bounded linear operator T: X \rightarrow Y is not necessarily closed.
Hint: Use the linear bounded operator T: l^{\infty} \rightarrow l^{\infty} defined by (\eta_{j}) = T x, \eta_{j} = \xi_{j}/j, x = (\xi_{j}).
Homework Equations
The Attempt at a Solution
My idea was to find an element y \in l^{\infty} that does not belong to the range and then try to build a convergent sequence in \mathcal{R}(T) that has limit y. The element y = (1, 1, \ldots) satisfy the criteria because T^{-1}y = \{ x\}, with x = (\xi_{j}), \xi_{j} = j, but, clearly, x \not\in l^{\infty}, therefore, y \not\in \mathcal{R}(T). The problem arise when I try to build the sequence, because (T x_{m}) with x_{m} \in l^{\infty} cannot converge to y. Briefly, my problem is that I can´t find a limit point of \mathcal{R}(T) that doesn´t belong to \mathcal{R}(T).