Let $T$ be a linear operator between two infinite dimensional normed spaces $X$ and $Y$ whose kernel is a closed subset of its domain.
Does it imply that $T$ is bounded or not necessary ?
If yes I would be very grateful if one could mention the proof.
If no it would be better if a counter-example were provided.
That would imply that all injective linear operators are continuous, which is not true. Namely, extend the canonical Hilbert basis $\{e_i\}_{i\in\omega}$ of $\ell^2$ to a basis $\{e_i\}_{i\in\beth_1}$ and consider the one and only linear map $T:\ell^2\to\ell^2$ such that $T(e_i)=e_i$ for all $i\in\omega$ and $T(e_i)=2e_i$ for all $i\in\beth_1\setminus\omega$. Since it sendsa basis to another basis, it's bijective. However, it agree with $id$ on a dense subset while not being $id$ itself.