Modes of Convergence (Annotated Index)
Modes of Convergence (Annotated Index)
The purpose of this article is to serve as an annotated index of various modes of convergence and their
logical relationships. For an expository article, see Modes of convergence. Simple logical relationships
between different modes of convergence are indicated (e.g., if one implies another), formulaically rather
than in prose for quick reference, and indepth descriptions and discussions are reserved for their respective
articles.
Guide to this index. To avoid excessive verbiage, note that each of the following types of objects is a
special case of types preceding it: sets, topological spaces, uniform spaces, topological abelian groups
(TAG), normed vector spaces, Euclidean spaces, and the real/complex numbers. Also note that any metric
space is a uniform space. Finally, subheadings will always indicate special cases of their superheadings.
Implications:
- Convergence Cauchy-convergence
Note: A sequence exhibiting Cauchy-convergence is called a cauchy sequence to emphasize that it may not
be convergent.
Implications:
- Unconditional convergence convergence (by definition).
Absolute-convergence (convergence of )
Implications:
For many "global" modes of convergence, there are corresponding notions of a) "local" and b) "compact"
convergence, which are given by requiring convergence to occur a) on some neighborhood of each point,
or b) on all compact subsets of X. Examples:
Implications:
- "Global" modes of convergence imply the corresponding "local" and "compact" modes of
convergence. E.g.:
Uniform convergence both local uniform convergence and compact (uniform) convergence.
Implications:
Normal convergence both local normal convergence and compact normal convergence.
- If X is locally compact:
See also
Limit of a sequence
Convergence of measures
Convergence in measure
Convergence of random variables:
in distribution
in probability
almost sure
sure
in mean