Abstract

Inner structure appeared in the literature of topological vector spaces as a tool to characterize the extremal structure of convex sets. For instance, in recent years, inner structure has been used to provide a solution to The Faceless Problem and to characterize the finest locally convex vector topology on a real vector space. This manuscript goes one step further by settling the bases for studying the inner structure of non-convex sets. In first place, we observe that the well behaviour of the extremal structure of convex sets with respect to the inner structure does not transport to non-convex sets in the following sense: it has been already proved that if a face of a convex set intersects the inner points, then the face is the whole convex set; however, in the non-convex setting, we find an example of a non-convex set with a proper extremal subset that intersects the inner points. On the opposite, we prove that if a extremal subset of a non-necessarily convex set intersects the affine internal points, then the extremal subset coincides with the whole set. On the other hand, it was proved in the inner structure literature that isomorphisms of vector spaces and translations preserve the sets of inner points and outer points. In this manuscript, we show that in general, affine maps and convex maps do not preserve inner points. Finally, by making use of the inner structure, we find a simple proof of the fact that a convex and absorbing set is a neighborhood of 0 in the finest locally convex vector topology. In fact, we show that in a convex set with internal points, the subset of its inner points coincides with the subset of its internal points, which also coincides with its interior with respect to the finest locally convex vector topology.

Highlights

  • The main goal of this work is to entail a study of inner structure in non-necessarily convex sets

  • We show in Lemma 5 that in a convex set with internal points, the subset of its inner points coincides with the subset of its internal points, which coincides with its interior with respect to the finest locally convex vector topology

  • We provide a new proof of the fact that every convex absorbing subset of a vector space is a neighborhood of 0 in the finest locally convex vector topology

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Summary

Introduction

The main goal of this work is to entail a study of inner structure in non-necessarily convex sets. The origin and motivation of inner structure dates back to [4,5] under the concept of internal point in a convex setting, which we will define and use later on This manuscript is divided into eight sections. We characterize the linearly closed sets (see Corollary 3) and we construct non-trivial examples of non-convex, balanced, absorbing and linearly open sets (see Theorems 7–9), which are candidate not to be neighborhoods of zero in the finest locally convex vector topology (for this we strongly rely on [14,15], where plenty of examples of balanced an absorbing sets with empty interior were provided for any Hausdorff locally convex topological vector space of dimension greater than or equal to 2). In the eighth and last section, we prove that if a set is linearly closed, so are its convex components (see Theorem 13)

Preliminaries
Extremal Sets and Inner Points

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