Introduction
In the case that the space
is compact then all continuous functions belong to
as we will show in the next section. On the other hand if the space
is not compact, we always have the inclusion
, but there may be some continuous functions that do not belong to
. Some of them may even even be bounded and still not belong to
, which motivates us to consider the dual space of
and the dual space of
.
Background and Statement
Let
equipped with the sup norm. In other words this is the space of continuous functions vanishing at infinity. When
is compact we can choose
in the previous definition, and since properties on the empty set are trivially true, we can conclude that
. Let
be the space of bounded continuous functions on
together with the sup norm. Again when
is compact we have not introduced a new space since every continuous function on a compact metric space is bounded, to see this assume on the contrary that there is a sequence
such that
as
. By compactness there is a sub-sequence
converging to a point
. Therefore by continuity of
we have
, and this is our desired contradiction. We conclude that
.
The rest of this discussion will consider the case where
is not compact. Rather than equality of the three spaces, we have the inclusions:
The case of 
The representation of the dual space of
is a described by the following well known result in Functional Analysis (Riesz Representation Theorem 6.19 in Rudin [1]):
Let
be a locally compact Hausdorff space For any bounded linear function
, i.e. an element of the dual space
, there is a unique complex Borel measure
such that the following holds:
.
This allows us to identify
with
, the space of complex Borel measures. Moreover we can endow
with the total variation norm:
.
The case of 
To describe the dual space of
, we will focus on the behavior of functions at infinity, as in Exercise 1.23 of [2]. We first need a preliminary result:
is a closed (vector) subspace of
. In other words,
contains all its limit points. Let
be a convergent sequence in
, where
are continuous functions vanishing at infinity and let
their limit then f is continuous since the uniform norm we are using provides uniform convergence. It remains to show that the limit
vanishes at infinity: let
be such that
.Now since each
vanishes at infinity, we can find
such that
for any
. Then we can conclude by the triangle inequality that
.
That is,
. This proves
is a closed subspace of
. We may now carefully specify the local property at infinity for
.
We say that a function
admits a limit at infinity,
, if for any
there exists a compact set
such that
implies
. We can see this operation as a linear function 'limit at infinity'. Thanks to Hahn-Banach we can build a continuous extension of it for all of
. This is another spectacular consequence of Axiom of Choice (Hahn-Banach theorem [1] in this case). Intuitively we can partition the space
into equivalence classes of the equivalence relation of having the same limit at infinity. Then by to the axiom of choice we choose a representative for each class. The problem with this argument, however, is that we don't know yet that every function in
admits such a limit. But this will not stop us from falling down the rabbit hole: note that every function in
admits such a limit, let
,
Since the functions vanish at infinity this operation of assigning the limit at infinity is clearly a linear map. It's not hard to see that
, i.e. a bounded linear operator on
. We showed before that
is a closed (vector) subspace of
therefore we can extend
to all of
using the formulation of the Hahn Banach Theorem for normed spaces. Let
be such extension,
and
on
. Note that this functional is supported at infinity, in the sense that for any
, we have
.
Kantorovich Duality for 
As it can be found in Villani, Proposition 1.22 [3] also ([2]), the following version of Kantorovich duality holds: let
and
be locally compact Polish spaces, let
be a lower semi-continuous non negative function on
and let
and
be two Borel probability measures on
respectively, then,
,
Here
is the set of all probability measures
that satisfy
and
for any measurable set
and any measurable set
;
is the set of all measurable functions
that satisfy
for
for almost all
and for
almost all
.
As mentioned in Villani Section 1.3 pg. 39[4], if we try to extend the proof of the compact case we run into a problem since the dual of
strictly contains
. If we restrict to the closed subspace
then any element in
which acts continuously, as mentioned before, can be represented by a unique
such that
.
We can then write
where
is a continuous linear functional supported at infinity, i.e.
implies
.
From what is discussed in the previous section, the behavior of some
may not be clear at first glance as the following result shows in exercise 1.23 of [5].
Let
and
be two Borel probability measures on
respectively There is a continuous linear functional
on
, supported at infinity, such that the following holds:
.
To prove this we want to apply what we have seen in the previous section. Lets consider the function
: for fixed
we can see this function as a function of
i,e, let
. Noticing that
, so we can assign a limit at infinity,
, to
and then extend it to all
following the construction of
in the precious section. Similarly we will consider for any fixed
the function
as a function of
. Note that such an extension is supported at infinity! This will allow us to first write the two functions:
.
Since we are only considering functions that vanish at infinity we can conclude that our
and
satisfy the following:
.
Here
, with a slightly abuse of notation, is the simultaneous assignment of the limit at infinity in
and
. The simultaneous extension
, again with a little abuse of notation, will be a bounded linear functional on
and it will satisfy
when restricted to
. By construction, shown in the previous section,
is supported at infinity which means that when restricted to
, it acts like the
map. This means that we can't conclude easily that
can be represented as an element of
.
It turns out that in our hypothesis we can have the decomposition
where
is a continuous linear functional supported at infinity and then
can be indeed represented as an element of
; we will write:
. The key idea to prove this is to use the identity
. The detailed proof can be found again in Villani lemma 1.25 [6].
- ↑ Rudin, Walter. Real and Complex Analysis, 1966.
- ↑ Villani, Cedric. Topics In Optimal Transportation. American Mathematical Soc., 2003.
- ↑ Villani, Cedric. Topics In Optimal Transportation. American Mathematical Soc., 2003.
- ↑ Villani, Cedric. Topics In Optimal Transportation. American Mathematical Soc., 2003.
- ↑ Villani, Cedric. Topics In Optimal Transportation. American Mathematical Soc., 2003.
- ↑ Villani, Cedric. Topics In Optimal Transportation. American Mathematical Soc., 2003.