A Banach space is uniformly smooth if and only if its continuous dual is uniformly convex (and vice versa, via reflexivity).[3] The moduli of convexity and smoothness are linked by
and the maximal convex function majorated by the modulus of convexity δX is given by[4]
A Banach space is uniformly smooth if and only if the limit
exists uniformly for all (where denotes the unit sphere of ).
When 1 < p < ∞, the Lp-spaces are uniformly smooth (and uniformly convex).
Enflo proved[6]
that the class of Banach spaces that admit an equivalent uniformly convex norm coincides with the class of super-reflexive Banach spaces, introduced by Robert C. James.[7]
As a space is super-reflexive if and only if its dual is super-reflexive, it follows that the class of Banach spaces that admit an equivalent uniformly convex norm coincides with the class of spaces that admit an equivalent uniformly smooth norm. The Pisier renorming theorem[8]
states that a super-reflexive space X admits an equivalent uniformly smooth norm for which the modulus of smoothness ρX satisfies, for some constant C and some p > 1
It follows that every super-reflexive space Y admits an equivalent uniformly convex norm for which the modulus of convexity satisfies, for some constant c > 0 and some positive real q
If a normed space admits two equivalent norms, one uniformly convex and one uniformly smooth, the Asplund averaging technique[9] produces another equivalent norm that is both uniformly convex and uniformly smooth.
Itô, Kiyosi (1993), Encyclopedic Dictionary of Mathematics, Volume 1, MIT Press, ISBN0-262-59020-4[1]
Lindenstrauss, Joram; Tzafriri, Lior (1979), Classical Banach spaces. II. Function spaces, Ergebnisse der Mathematik und ihrer Grenzgebiete [Results in Mathematics and Related Areas], vol. 97, Berlin-New York: Springer-Verlag, pp. x+243, ISBN3-540-08888-1.