Nonlinear biseparating maps
Abstract
An additive map T acting between spaces of vector-valued functions is said to be biseparating if T is a bijection so that f and g are disjoint if and only if Tf and Tg are disjoint. Note that an additive bijection retains Q-linearity. For a general nonlinear map T, the definition of biseparating given above turns out to be too weak to determine the structure of T. In this paper, we propose a revised definition of biseparating maps for general nonlinear operators acting between spaces of vector-valued functions, which coincides with the previous definition for additive maps. Under some mild assumptions on the function spaces involved, it turns out that a map is biseparating if and only if it is locally determined. We then delve deeply into some specific function spaces -- spaces of continuous functions, uniformly continuous functions and Lipschitz functions -- and characterize the biseparating maps acting on them. As a by-product, certain forms of automatic continuity are obtained. We also prove some finer properties of biseparating maps in the cases of uniformly continuous and Lipschitz functions.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.