Selection theorem
In functional analysis, a branch of mathematics, a selection theorem is a theorem that guarantees the existence of a single-valued selection function from a given set-valued map. There are various selection theorems, and they are important in the theories of differential inclusions, optimal control, and mathematical economics.
Preliminaries
Given two sets X and Y, let F be a set-valued function from X and Y. Equivalently, is a function from X to the power set of Y.
A function is said to be a selection of F if
In other words, given an input x for which the original function F returns multiple values, the new function f returns a single value. This is a special case of a choice function.
The axiom of choice implies that a selection function always exists; however, it is often important that the selection have some "nice" properties, such as continuity or measurability. This is where the selection theorems come into action: they guarantee that, if F satisfies certain properties, then it has a selection f that is continuous or has other desirable properties.
Selection theorems for set-valued functions
The Michael selection theorem says that the following conditions are sufficient for the existence of a continuous selection:
- X is a paracompact space;
- Y is a Banach space;
- F is lower hemicontinuous;
- for all x in X, the set F(x) is nonempty, convex and closed.
The approximate selection theorem states the following:
Here, denotes the -dilation of , that is, the union of radius-open balls centered on points in . The theorem implies the existence of a continuous approximate selection.
Another set of sufficient conditions for the existence of a continuous approximate selection is given by the Deutsch–Kenderov theorem, whose conditions are more general than those of Michael's theorem (and thus the selection is only approximate):
- X is a paracompact space;
- Y is a normed vector space;
- F is almost lower hemicontinuous, that is, at each , for each neighborhood of there exists a neighborhood of such that ;
- for all x in X, the set F(x) is nonempty and convex.
In a later note, Xu proved that the Deutsch–Kenderov theorem is also valid if is a locally convex topological vector space.
The Yannelis-Prabhakar selection theorem says that the following conditions are sufficient for the existence of a continuous selection:
- X is a paracompact Hausdorff space;
- Y is a linear topological space;
- for all x in X, the set F(x) is nonempty and convex;
- for all y in Y, the inverse set F−1(y) is an open set in X.
The Kuratowski and Ryll-Nardzewski measurable selection theorem says that if X is a Polish space and its Borel σ-algebra, is the set of nonempty closed subsets of X, is a measurable space, and is an -weakly measurable map (that is, for every open subset we have ), then has a selection that is -measurable.
Other selection theorems for set-valued functions include:
- Bressan–Colombo directionally continuous selection theorem
- Castaing representation theorem
- Fryszkowski decomposable map selection
- Helly's selection theorem
- Zero-dimensional Michael selection theorem
- Robert Aumann measurable selection theorem