It's well known that for metric spaces the following is true
Let $ X $ be a space with two different metrics $ d_1,d_2$ such that the two topological spaces $ (X,d_1),(X,d_2) $ have the same convergent sequences. Then the two topologies are the same.
Now looking at a space $ X $ with two topologies $ \tau_1,\tau_2 $ this is not true any more, i.e. if the topological spaces $ (X,\tau_1), (X,\tau_2)$ have the same convergent sequences the topologies may differ!
A classical example is $ l^1 $ due to Issai Schur.
So my questions are:
- Is there a more topological/simpler example?
- I just know the "standard" functional analysis proof of Schur's lemma. On Wikipedia they refer to his article in "Journal für die reine und angewandte Mathematik, 151 (1921) pp. 79-111". I didn't work through the paper (and I won't) but just skimming through the paper, I don't see how we can deduce from the paper, that $ l^1$ has the Schur property. If there is someone who's familiar with the paper a short argument would be appreciated.
I'm not sure if I should place the second question here. If not, let me know and I will post a new one.
Thx and cheers
math
Edit: Since question 1 was beautifully answered by JDH, I'll leave it at the simplest and silliest example that came to my mind — more substance (I hope) is in the second part of the answer:
On an uncountable set, both in the discrete topology and the cocountable topology (the topology consisting of the empty set and the sets with countable complement), the only convergent sequences are the eventually constant ones. Since the set is not countable, the topologies are distinct (countable sets are open in the discrete topology while they aren't in the cocountable topology).
As for question 2, the paper in question is:
J. Schur, Über lineare Transformationen in der Theorie der unendlichen Reihen, Journal für die reine und angewandte Mathematik (Crelle's Journal), 151 (1921), 79–111 (full text is behind a pay wall).
In modern terms, Schur starts out by identifying $\ell^1$ as the dual space of $c$, the space of convergent sequences via the pairing $\langle \mathbf{a},\mathbf{x}\rangle_{\ell^1, c} = \sum_{n=1}^{\infty} a_n x_n$:
The proof is a rather immediate consequence of Abel's summation criterion.
Consider a sequence $(\mathbf{a}_{n})_{n =1}^{\infty} \subset \ell^{1}$, where $\mathbf{a}_{n} = (a_{n1}, a_{n2}, \ldots)$. Let $c$ be the space of convergent sequences. Note that for each sequence $(\mathbf{a}_n)_{n=1}^{\infty}$, we get a linear map $A: c \to \mathbb{R}^{\mathbb{N}}$ given by $$A\mathbf{x} = (\langle \mathbf{a}_1, \mathbf{x}\rangle, \langle \mathbf{a}_2,\mathbf{x}\rangle, \ldots).$$ Schur seeks to determine necessary and sufficient conditions to ensure that $A$ defines a linear map $c \to c$ (he calls such maps convergence-preserving: they map convergent sequences to convergent sequences).
The necessary and sufficient conditions are (part I of the Hauptsatz on page 82):
The second question Schur asks is: when does a sequence $(\mathbf{a}_n)_{n=1}^{\infty} \subset \ell^1$ induce an operator $\ell^{\infty} \to c$? The formula is again $A: \ell^{\infty} \to \mathbb{R}^{\mathbb{N}}$ and $$A\mathbf{x} = (\langle \mathbf{a}_1, \mathbf{x}\rangle, \langle \mathbf{a}_2,\mathbf{x}\rangle, \ldots)$$ for $\mathbf{x} \in \ell^{\infty}$ (he calls such operators $A$ convergence-generating). Since $A$ as above induces in particular an operator $A: c \to c$, the above conditions must be satisfied, so the condition must certainly be stronger. Indeed, part III of the Hauptsatz on page 82 reads:
In the course of the proof he establishes that $\|\mathbf{a}_n - \mathbf{a}\|_{1} \;\xrightarrow{n\to\infty} \; 0$, so he shows that weak convergence implies norm convergence, as desired. To prove this, he proceeds by contradiction (see §4, p.89f). One easily reduces to the case that $\mathbf{a} = 0$ and, assuming that $\|\mathbf a_{n}\|_{1} \not\to 0$, he builds a bounded sequence $\mathbf{x}$ for which the sequence $A\mathbf{x} = (\langle \mathbf{a}_1, \mathbf{x}\rangle, \langle \mathbf{a}_2,\mathbf{x}\rangle, \ldots)$ is not convergent, contradicting weak convergence.
For the convenience of the readers, here is the Hauptsatz in full: