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We study uniform and coarse embeddings between Banach spaces and topological groups. A particular focus is put on equivariant embeddings, that is, continuous cocycles associated to continuous affine isometric actions of topological groups on separable Banach spaces with varying geometry.
We prove a normalized version of the restricted invertibility principle obtained by Spielman and Srivastava in [An elementary proof of the restricted invertibility theorem. Israel J. Math.190 (2012), 83–91]. Applying this result, we get a new proof of the proportional Dvoretzky–Rogers factorization theorem recovering the best current estimate in the symmetric setting while we improve the best known result in the non-symmetric case. As a consequence, we slightly improve the estimate for the Banach–Mazur distance to the cube: the distance of every $n$-dimensional normed space from ${ \ell }_{\infty }^{n} $ is at most $\mathop{(2n)}\nolimits ^{5/ 6} $. Finally, using tools from the work of Batson et al in [Twice-Ramanujan sparsifiers. In STOC’09 – Proceedings of the 2009 ACM International Symposium on Theory of Computing, ACM (New York, 2009), 255–262], we give a new proof for a theorem of Kashin and Tzafriri [Some remarks on the restriction of operators to coordinate subspaces. Preprint, 1993] on the norm of restricted matrices.
It is shown that a separable Hilbert space can be covered by non-overlapping closed convex sets Ci with outer radii uniformly bounded from above and inner radii uniformly bounded from below. This answers a question originating from the work of Klee.
The following property of a normalized basis in a Banach space is considered: any normalized block sequence of the basis has a subsequence equivalent to the basis. Under uniformity or other natural assumptions, a basis with this property is equivalent to the unit vector basis of $c_0$ or $\ell_p$. An analogous problem concerning spreading models is also addressed.
It is proved that the duality map $\langle\,,\rangle:(\ell^\infty,\hbox{weak})\times((\ell^\infty)^*,\hbox{weak}^* )\longrightarrow {\bf R}$ is not Borel. More generally, the evaluation $e:(C(K),\wk)\times K\longrightarrow{\bf R}$, $e(f,x) = f(x)$, is not Borel for any function space $C(K)$ on a compact $F$-space. It is also shown that a non-coincidence of norm-Borel and weak-Borel sets in a function space does not imply that the duality map is non-Borel.
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