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Gelfand–Naimark–Segal construction

In functional analysis, a discipline within mathematics, given a C*-algebra A, the Gelfand–Naimark–Segal construction establishes a correspondence between cyclic *-representations of A and certain linear functionals on A (called states). The correspondence is shown by an explicit construction of the *-representation from the state. It is named for Israel Gelfand, Mark Naimark, and Irving Segal.

States and representations edit

A *-representation of a C*-algebra A on a Hilbert space H is a mapping π from A into the algebra of bounded operators on H such that

  • π is a ring homomorphism which carries involution on A into involution on operators
  • π is nondegenerate, that is the space of vectors π(x) ξ is dense as x ranges through A and ξ ranges through H. Note that if A has an identity, nondegeneracy means exactly π is unit-preserving, i.e. π maps the identity of A to the identity operator on H.

A state on a C*-algebra A is a positive linear functional f of norm 1. If A has a multiplicative unit element this condition is equivalent to f(1) = 1.

For a representation π of a C*-algebra A on a Hilbert space H, an element ξ is called a cyclic vector if the set of vectors

 

is norm dense in H, in which case π is called a cyclic representation. Any non-zero vector of an irreducible representation is cyclic. However, non-zero vectors in a general cyclic representation may fail to be cyclic.

The GNS construction edit

Let π be a *-representation of a C*-algebra A on the Hilbert space H and ξ be a unit norm cyclic vector for π. Then

 
is a state of A.

Conversely, every state of A may be viewed as a vector state as above, under a suitable canonical representation.

Theorem.[1] — Given a state ρ of A, there is a *-representation π of A acting on a Hilbert space H with distinguished unit cyclic vector ξ such that   for every a in A.

Proof
  1. Construction of the Hilbert space H

    Define on A a semi-definite sesquilinear form

     
    By the Cauchy–Schwarz inequality, the degenerate elements, a in A satisfying ρ(a* a)= 0, form a vector subspace I of A. By a C*-algebraic argument, one can show that I is a left ideal of A (known as the left kernel of ρ). In fact, it is the largest left ideal in the null space of ρ. The quotient space of A by the vector subspace I is an inner product space with the inner product defined by . The Cauchy completion of A/I in the norm induced by this inner product is a Hilbert space, which we denote by H.
  2. Construction of the representation π
    Define the action π of A on A/I by π(a)(b+I) = ab+I of A on A/I. The same argument showing I is a left ideal also implies that π(a) is a bounded operator on A/I and therefore can be extended uniquely to the completion. Unravelling the definition of the adjoint of an operator on a Hilbert space, π turns out to be *-preserving. This proves the existence of a *-representation π.
  3. Identifying the unit norm cyclic vector ξ

    If A has a multiplicative identity 1, then it is immediate that the equivalence class ξ in the GNS Hilbert space H containing 1 is a cyclic vector for the above representation. If A is non-unital, take an approximate identity {eλ} for A. Since positive linear functionals are bounded, the equivalence classes of the net {eλ} converges to some vector ξ in H, which is a cyclic vector for π.

    It is clear from the definition of the inner product on the GNS Hilbert space H that the state ρ can be recovered as a vector state on H. This proves the theorem.

The method used to produce a *-representation from a state of A in the proof of the above theorem is called the GNS construction. For a state of a C*-algebra A, the corresponding GNS representation is essentially uniquely determined by the condition,   as seen in the theorem below.

Theorem.[2] — Given a state ρ of A, let π, π' be *-representations of A on Hilbert spaces H, H respectively each with unit norm cyclic vectors ξ ∈ H, ξ' ∈ H such that   for all  . Then π, π' are unitarily equivalent *-representations i.e. there is a unitary operator U from H to H such that π'(a) = Uπ(a)U* for all a in A. The operator U that implements the unitary equivalence maps π(a)ξ to π'(a)ξ' for all a in A.

Significance of the GNS construction edit

The GNS construction is at the heart of the proof of the Gelfand–Naimark theorem characterizing C*-algebras as algebras of operators. A C*-algebra has sufficiently many pure states (see below) so that the direct sum of corresponding irreducible GNS representations is faithful.

The direct sum of the corresponding GNS representations of all states is called the universal representation of A. The universal representation of A contains every cyclic representation. As every *-representation is a direct sum of cyclic representations, it follows that every *-representation of A is a direct summand of some sum of copies of the universal representation.

If Φ is the universal representation of a C*-algebra A, the closure of Φ(A) in the weak operator topology is called the enveloping von Neumann algebra of A. It can be identified with the double dual A**.

Irreducibility edit

Also of significance is the relation between irreducible *-representations and extreme points of the convex set of states. A representation π on H is irreducible if and only if there are no closed subspaces of H which are invariant under all the operators π(x) other than H itself and the trivial subspace {0}.

Theorem — The set of states of a C*-algebra A with a unit element is a compact convex set under the weak-* topology. In general, (regardless of whether or not A has a unit element) the set of positive functionals of norm ≤ 1 is a compact convex set.

Both of these results follow immediately from the Banach–Alaoglu theorem.

In the unital commutative case, for the C*-algebra C(X) of continuous functions on some compact X, Riesz–Markov–Kakutani representation theorem says that the positive functionals of norm ≤ 1 are precisely the Borel positive measures on X with total mass ≤ 1. It follows from Krein–Milman theorem that the extremal states are the Dirac point-mass measures.

On the other hand, a representation of C(X) is irreducible if and only if it is one-dimensional. Therefore, the GNS representation of C(X) corresponding to a measure μ is irreducible if and only if μ is an extremal state. This is in fact true for C*-algebras in general.

Theorem — Let A be a C*-algebra. If π is a *-representation of A on the Hilbert space H with unit norm cyclic vector ξ, then π is irreducible if and only if the corresponding state f is an extreme point of the convex set of positive linear functionals on A of norm ≤ 1.

To prove this result one notes first that a representation is irreducible if and only if the commutant of π(A), denoted by π(A)', consists of scalar multiples of the identity.

Any positive linear functionals g on A dominated by f is of the form

 
for some positive operator Tg in π(A)' with 0 ≤ T ≤ 1 in the operator order. This is a version of the Radon–Nikodym theorem.

For such g, one can write f as a sum of positive linear functionals: f = g + g' . So π is unitarily equivalent to a subrepresentation of πg ⊕ πg' . This shows that π is irreducible if and only if any such πg is unitarily equivalent to π, i.e. g is a scalar multiple of f, which proves the theorem.

Extremal states are usually called pure states. Note that a state is a pure state if and only if it is extremal in the convex set of states.

The theorems above for C*-algebras are valid more generally in the context of B*-algebras with approximate identity.

Generalizations edit

The Stinespring factorization theorem characterizing completely positive maps is an important generalization of the GNS construction.

History edit

Gelfand and Naimark's paper on the Gelfand–Naimark theorem was published in 1943.[3] Segal recognized the construction that was implicit in this work and presented it in sharpened form.[4]

In his paper of 1947 Segal showed that it is sufficient, for any physical system that can be described by an algebra of operators on a Hilbert space, to consider the irreducible representations of a C*-algebra. In quantum theory this means that the C*-algebra is generated by the observables. This, as Segal pointed out, had been shown earlier by John von Neumann only for the specific case of the non-relativistic Schrödinger-Heisenberg theory.[5]

See also edit

References edit

  • William Arveson, An Invitation to C*-Algebra, Springer-Verlag, 1981
  • Kadison, Richard, Fundamentals of the Theory of Operator Algebras, Vol. I : Elementary Theory, American Mathematical Society. ISBN 978-0821808191.
  • Jacques Dixmier, Les C*-algèbres et leurs Représentations, Gauthier-Villars, 1969.
    English translation: Dixmier, Jacques (1982). C*-algebras. North-Holland. ISBN 0-444-86391-5.
  • Thomas Timmermann, An invitation to quantum groups and duality: from Hopf algebras to multiplicative unitaries and beyond, European Mathematical Society, 2008, ISBN 978-3-03719-043-2 – Appendix 12.1, section: GNS construction (p. 371)
  • Stefan Waldmann: On the representation theory of deformation quantization, In: Deformation Quantization: Proceedings of the Meeting of Theoretical Physicists and Mathematicians, Strasbourg, May 31-June 2, 2001 (Studies in Generative Grammar) , Gruyter, 2002, ISBN 978-3-11-017247-8, p. 107–134 – section 4. The GNS construction (p. 113)
  • G. Giachetta, L. Mangiarotti, G. Sardanashvily (2005). Geometric and Algebraic Topological Methods in Quantum Mechanics. World Scientific. ISBN 981-256-129-3.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Shoichiro Sakai, C*-Algebras and W*-Algebras, Springer-Verlag 1971. ISBN 3-540-63633-1

Inline references edit

  1. ^ Kadison, R. V., Theorem 4.5.2, Fundamentals of the Theory of Operator Algebras, Vol. I : Elementary Theory, American Mathematical Society. ISBN 978-0821808191
  2. ^ Kadison, R. V., Proposition 4.5.3, Fundamentals of the Theory of Operator Algebras, Vol. I : Elementary Theory, American Mathematical Society. ISBN 978-0821808191
  3. ^ I. M. Gelfand, M. A. Naimark (1943). "On the imbedding of normed rings into the ring of operators on a Hilbert space". Matematicheskii Sbornik. 12 (2): 197–217. (also Google Books, see pp. 3–20)
  4. ^ Richard V. Kadison: Notes on the Gelfand–Neimark theorem. In: Robert C. Doran (ed.): C*-Algebras: 1943–1993. A Fifty Year Celebration, AMS special session commemorating the first fifty years of C*-algebra theory, January 13–14, 1993, San Antonio, Texas, American Mathematical Society, pp. 21–54, ISBN 0-8218-5175-6 (available from Google Books, see pp. 21 ff.)
  5. ^ I. E. Segal (1947). "Irreducible representations of operator algebras" (PDF). Bull. Am. Math. Soc. 53 (2): 73–88. doi:10.1090/s0002-9904-1947-08742-5.

gelfand, naimark, segal, construction, functional, analysis, discipline, within, mathematics, given, algebra, establishes, correspondence, between, cyclic, representations, certain, linear, functionals, called, states, correspondence, shown, explicit, construc. In functional analysis a discipline within mathematics given a C algebra A the Gelfand Naimark Segal construction establishes a correspondence between cyclic representations of A and certain linear functionals on A called states The correspondence is shown by an explicit construction of the representation from the state It is named for Israel Gelfand Mark Naimark and Irving Segal Contents 1 States and representations 1 1 The GNS construction 1 2 Significance of the GNS construction 2 Irreducibility 3 Generalizations 4 History 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Inline referencesStates and representations editA representation of a C algebra A on a Hilbert space H is a mapping p from A into the algebra of bounded operators on H such that p is a ring homomorphism which carries involution on A into involution on operators p is nondegenerate that is the space of vectors p x 3 is dense as x ranges through A and 3 ranges through H Note that if A has an identity nondegeneracy means exactly p is unit preserving i e p maps the identity of A to the identity operator on H A state on a C algebra A is a positive linear functional f of norm 1 If A has a multiplicative unit element this condition is equivalent to f 1 1 For a representation p of a C algebra A on a Hilbert space H an element 3 is called a cyclic vector if the set of vectors p x 3 x A displaystyle pi x xi x in A nbsp is norm dense in H in which case p is called a cyclic representation Any non zero vector of an irreducible representation is cyclic However non zero vectors in a general cyclic representation may fail to be cyclic The GNS construction edit Let p be a representation of a C algebra A on the Hilbert space H and 3 be a unit norm cyclic vector for p Thena p a 3 3 displaystyle a mapsto langle pi a xi xi rangle nbsp is a state of A Conversely every state of A may be viewed as a vector state as above under a suitable canonical representation Theorem 1 Given a state r of A there is a representation p of A acting on a Hilbert space H with distinguished unit cyclic vector 3 such that r a p a 3 3 displaystyle rho a langle pi a xi xi rangle nbsp for every a in A Proof Construction of the Hilbert space H Define on A a semi definite sesquilinear form a b r b a a b A displaystyle langle a b rangle rho b a a b in A nbsp By the Cauchy Schwarz inequality the degenerate elements a in A satisfying r a a 0 form a vector subspace I of A By a C algebraic argument one can show that I is a left ideal of A known as the left kernel of r In fact it is the largest left ideal in the null space of r The quotient space of A by the vector subspace I is an inner product space with the inner product defined by a I b I r b a a b A displaystyle langle a I b I rangle rho b a a b in A nbsp The Cauchy completion of A I in the norm induced by this inner product is a Hilbert space which we denote by H Construction of the representation p Define the action p of A on A I by p a b I ab I of A on A I The same argument showing I is a left ideal also implies that p a is a bounded operator on A I and therefore can be extended uniquely to the completion Unravelling the definition of the adjoint of an operator on a Hilbert space p turns out to be preserving This proves the existence of a representation p Identifying the unit norm cyclic vector 3 If A has a multiplicative identity 1 then it is immediate that the equivalence class 3 in the GNS Hilbert space H containing 1 is a cyclic vector for the above representation If A is non unital take an approximate identity el for A Since positive linear functionals are bounded the equivalence classes of the net el converges to some vector 3 in H which is a cyclic vector for p It is clear from the definition of the inner product on the GNS Hilbert space H that the state r can be recovered as a vector state on H This proves the theorem The method used to produce a representation from a state of A in the proof of the above theorem is called the GNS construction For a state of a C algebra A the corresponding GNS representation is essentially uniquely determined by the condition r a p a 3 3 displaystyle rho a langle pi a xi xi rangle nbsp as seen in the theorem below Theorem 2 Given a state r of A let p p be representations of A on Hilbert spaces H H respectively each with unit norm cyclic vectors 3 H 3 H such that r a p a 3 3 p a 3 3 displaystyle rho a langle pi a xi xi rangle langle pi a xi xi rangle nbsp for all a A displaystyle a in A nbsp Then p p are unitarily equivalent representations i e there is a unitary operator U from H to H such that p a Up a U for all a in A The operator U that implements the unitary equivalence maps p a 3 to p a 3 for all a in A Significance of the GNS construction edit The GNS construction is at the heart of the proof of the Gelfand Naimark theorem characterizing C algebras as algebras of operators A C algebra has sufficiently many pure states see below so that the direct sum of corresponding irreducible GNS representations is faithful The direct sum of the corresponding GNS representations of all states is called the universal representation of A The universal representation of A contains every cyclic representation As every representation is a direct sum of cyclic representations it follows that every representation of A is a direct summand of some sum of copies of the universal representation If F is the universal representation of a C algebra A the closure of F A in the weak operator topology is called the enveloping von Neumann algebra of A It can be identified with the double dual A Irreducibility editAlso of significance is the relation between irreducible representations and extreme points of the convex set of states A representation p on H is irreducible if and only if there are no closed subspaces of H which are invariant under all the operators p x other than H itself and the trivial subspace 0 Theorem The set of states of a C algebra A with a unit element is a compact convex set under the weak topology In general regardless of whether or not A has a unit element the set of positive functionals of norm 1 is a compact convex set Both of these results follow immediately from the Banach Alaoglu theorem In the unital commutative case for the C algebra C X of continuous functions on some compact X Riesz Markov Kakutani representation theorem says that the positive functionals of norm 1 are precisely the Borel positive measures on X with total mass 1 It follows from Krein Milman theorem that the extremal states are the Dirac point mass measures On the other hand a representation of C X is irreducible if and only if it is one dimensional Therefore the GNS representation of C X corresponding to a measure m is irreducible if and only if m is an extremal state This is in fact true for C algebras in general Theorem Let A be a C algebra If p is a representation of A on the Hilbert space H with unit norm cyclic vector 3 then p is irreducible if and only if the corresponding state f is an extreme point of the convex set of positive linear functionals on A of norm 1 To prove this result one notes first that a representation is irreducible if and only if the commutant of p A denoted by p A consists of scalar multiples of the identity Any positive linear functionals g on A dominated by f is of the formg x x p x 3 p x T g 3 displaystyle g x x langle pi x xi pi x T g xi rangle nbsp for some positive operator Tg in p A with 0 T 1 in the operator order This is a version of the Radon Nikodym theorem For such g one can write f as a sum of positive linear functionals f g g So p is unitarily equivalent to a subrepresentation of pg pg This shows that p is irreducible if and only if any such pg is unitarily equivalent to p i e g is a scalar multiple of f which proves the theorem Extremal states are usually called pure states Note that a state is a pure state if and only if it is extremal in the convex set of states The theorems above for C algebras are valid more generally in the context of B algebras with approximate identity Generalizations editThe Stinespring factorization theorem characterizing completely positive maps is an important generalization of the GNS construction History editGelfand and Naimark s paper on the Gelfand Naimark theorem was published in 1943 3 Segal recognized the construction that was implicit in this work and presented it in sharpened form 4 In his paper of 1947 Segal showed that it is sufficient for any physical system that can be described by an algebra of operators on a Hilbert space to consider the irreducible representations of a C algebra In quantum theory this means that the C algebra is generated by the observables This as Segal pointed out had been shown earlier by John von Neumann only for the specific case of the non relativistic Schrodinger Heisenberg theory 5 See also editCyclic and separating vector KSGNS constructionReferences editWilliam Arveson An Invitation to C Algebra Springer Verlag 1981 Kadison Richard Fundamentals of the Theory of Operator Algebras Vol I Elementary Theory American Mathematical Society ISBN 978 0821808191 Jacques Dixmier Les C algebres et leurs Representations Gauthier Villars 1969 English translation Dixmier Jacques 1982 C algebras North Holland ISBN 0 444 86391 5 Thomas Timmermann An invitation to quantum groups and duality from Hopf algebras to multiplicative unitaries and beyond European Mathematical Society 2008 ISBN 978 3 03719 043 2 Appendix 12 1 section GNS construction p 371 Stefan Waldmann On the representation theory of deformation quantization In Deformation Quantization Proceedings of the Meeting of Theoretical Physicists and Mathematicians Strasbourg May 31 June 2 2001 Studies in Generative Grammar Gruyter 2002 ISBN 978 3 11 017247 8 p 107 134 section 4 The GNS construction p 113 G Giachetta L Mangiarotti G Sardanashvily 2005 Geometric and Algebraic Topological Methods in Quantum Mechanics World Scientific ISBN 981 256 129 3 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Shoichiro Sakai C Algebras and W Algebras Springer Verlag 1971 ISBN 3 540 63633 1 Inline references edit Kadison R V Theorem 4 5 2 Fundamentals of the Theory of Operator Algebras Vol I Elementary Theory American Mathematical Society ISBN 978 0821808191 Kadison R V Proposition 4 5 3 Fundamentals of the Theory of Operator Algebras Vol I Elementary Theory American Mathematical Society ISBN 978 0821808191 I M Gelfand M A Naimark 1943 On the imbedding of normed rings into the ring of operators on a Hilbert space Matematicheskii Sbornik 12 2 197 217 also Google Books see pp 3 20 Richard V Kadison Notes on the Gelfand Neimark theorem In Robert C Doran ed C Algebras 1943 1993 A Fifty Year Celebration AMS special session commemorating the first fifty years of C algebra theory January 13 14 1993 San Antonio Texas American Mathematical Society pp 21 54 ISBN 0 8218 5175 6 available from Google Books see pp 21 ff I E Segal 1947 Irreducible representations of operator algebras PDF Bull Am Math Soc 53 2 73 88 doi 10 1090 s0002 9904 1947 08742 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gelfand Naimark Segal construction amp oldid 1219022943, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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