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For the next property, we need two quick definitions.
Definition 1 The sum of two spaces is the set .
Definition 2 The subspaces are disjoint if .
Theorem 1 Let , be subspaces. For each there exists a unique pair such that if and only if and are disjoint.
Proof: We prove the two directions of this “if and only if” statement separately.
If for each there exists a unique pair such that , then the subspaces and are disjoint.
Assume there exists a unique pair s.t. for each . For the sake of contradiction, assume and are not disjoint, i.e. there exists some such that . Pick and the corresponding such that . Then,
We examine these two terms in the equation:
Also note
So we have two pairs of elements from and which sum to , a contradiction to the assumption that these pairs are unique. Therefore, and thus and are disjoint.
If and are disjoint, then for each there exists a unique pair such that .
To prove uniqueness, we will assume that two distinct pairs exist and show at the end that they are qual to each other. The two pairs we begin with are
so the pairs are distinct from each other. Subtract the equations:
We examine these two terms in the equation:
Since those two terms are equal,
which means that and . Our starting assumption was that , so therefore and which implies and . This statement is a contradiction since we assumed that the pairs were distinct, i.e., and . Therefore, only a unique pair , exists such that .
Fact 1 If is a subspace, then and are disjoint. To see this, assume , which means and so for all . Pick so which means .
Fact 2 Using Fact 1, we can show that for each there exists a unique pair and such that . In particular:
In fact, there is quite a lot more we can say about the projection of a point into a subspace
Theorem 2 Let be a Hilbert space and be a closed subspace of . For any vector there exists a unique point that is closest to , i.e.,
In other words, for all with equality only if .
Furthermore, is a minimizer of over if and only if . In other words, .
Proof: To structure our proof, we will restate the theorem into four separate facts:
Each of these facts is proven separately.
1. Existence: If , then is the minimizer (since 0 is the minimum distance). If , we denote . Note here that we use the infimum, which is the upper bound on all the lower bounds on the distance. The infimum is used because we do not yet know if there exists a point in that has lowest distance to . Note also that an infimum exists because norms have a lower bound.
We need to show that for some , we have . Let be a sequence that yields . We will show that this sequence is a Cauchy sequence; thenm using the fact that the space is closed and Hilbert, it is complete and therefore the Cauchy sequence must converge to a point .
To prove that the sequence is Cauchy, we use the Parallelogram Law:
Since is a subspace, so , since is the infimum. Therefore,
At this point, we note that as , and so the sequence can be shown to be a Cauchy sequence. Since is Cauchy, it converges to a point and by the triangle inequality:
Now the first term of the inequality goes to as and the second term goes to 0, and so we have that for all values of . Since was the infimum of the norm on the left hand side, it follows that , and so we have found that a minimizer exists.
2. Orthogonality of the error: We proceed by contradiction by assuming is not orthonormal to , i.e., that there exists a unit-norm vector such that . Let . Then . Furthermore,
Now we recognize two simplifications. First, we selected so that ; second, the remaining inner product is equal to . Therefore,
This is a contradiction, since we have found a closer to than . Thus for all , which means that .
3. Sufficiency of orthogonality: Assume . For any with , we have . We use the Pythagorean theorem (if then ): since and , we have . Since , we have , and so . Now, since we picked arbitrarily, it follows that is the minimizer of over .
4. Uniqueness: We can write . From previous parts, we know that and . Since and are disjoint, only one pair of values and that holds these two properties exists. Therefore, the minimizer is unique.
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