Historical remarks
One of Gelfand's original applications (and one which historically motivated much of the study of Banach algebras) was to give a much shorter and more conceptual proof of a celebrated lemma ofThe model algebra
For anyGelfand representation of a commutative Banach algebra
Let be a commutative Banach algebra, defined over the field of complex numbers. A non-zero algebra homomorphism (a multiplicative linear functional) is called a ''character'' of ; the set of all characters of is denoted by . It can be shown that every character on is automatically continuous, and hence is a subset of the space of continuous linear functionals on ; moreover, when equipped with the relative weak-* topology, turns out to be locally compact and Hausdorff. (This follows from the Banach–Alaoglu theorem.) The space is compact (in the topology just defined) if and only if the algebra has an identity element. Given , one defines the function by . The definition of and the topology on it ensure that is continuous and vanishes at infinity, and that the map defines a norm-decreasing, unit-preserving algebra homomorphism from to . This homomorphism is the ''Gelfand representation of '', and is the ''Gelfand transform'' of the element . In general, the representation is neither injective nor surjective. In the case where has an identity element, there is a bijection between and the set of maximal ideals in (this relies on the Gelfand–Mazur theorem). As a consequence, the kernel of the Gelfand representation may be identified with the Jacobson radical of . Thus the Gelfand representation is injective if and only if is (Jacobson) semisimple.Examples
In the case where , the group algebra of , then is homeomorphic to and the Gelfand transform of is theThe C*-algebra case
As motivation, consider the special case ''A'' = ''C''0(''X''). Given ''x'' in ''X'', let be pointwise evaluation at ''x'', i.e. . Then is a character on ''A'', and it can be shown that all characters of ''A'' are of this form; a more precise analysis shows that we may identify Φ''A'' with ''X'', not just as sets but as topological spaces. The Gelfand representation is then an isomorphism :The spectrum of a commutative C*-algebra
The spectrum or Gelfand space of a commutative C*-algebra ''A'', denoted ''Â'', consists of the set of ''non-zero'' *-homomorphisms from ''A'' to the complex numbers. Elements of the spectrum are called characters on ''A''. (It can be shown that every algebra homomorphism from ''A'' to the complex numbers is automatically a *-homomorphism, so that this definition of the term 'character' agrees with the one above.) In particular, the spectrum of a commutative C*-algebra is a locally compact Hausdorff space: In the unital case, i.e. where the C*-algebra has a multiplicative unit element 1, all characters ''f'' must be unital, i.e. ''f''(1) is the complex number one. This excludes the zero homomorphism. So ''Â'' is closed under weak-* convergence and the spectrum is actually ''compact''. In the non-unital case, the weak-* closure of ''Â'' is ''Â'' ∪ , where 0 is the zero homomorphism, and the removal of a single point from a compact Hausdorff space yields a locally compact Hausdorff space. Note that ''spectrum'' is an overloaded word. It also refers to the spectrum σ(''x'') of an element ''x'' of an algebra with unit 1, that is the set of complex numbers ''r'' for which ''x'' − ''r'' 1 is not invertible in ''A''. For unital C*-algebras, the two notions are connected in the following way: σ(''x'') is the set of complex numbers ''f''(''x'') where ''f'' ranges over Gelfand space of ''A''. Together with theStatement of the commutative Gelfand–Naimark theorem
Let ''A'' be a commutative C*-algebra and let ''X'' be the spectrum of ''A''. Let : be the Gelfand representation defined above. Theorem. The Gelfand map γ is an isometric *-isomorphism from ''A'' onto ''C''0(''X''). See the Arveson reference below. The spectrum of a commutative C*-algebra can also be viewed as the set of all maximal ideals ''m'' of ''A'', with the hull-kernel topology. (See the earlier remarks for the general, commutative Banach algebra case.) For any such ''m'' the quotient algebra ''A/m'' is one-dimensional (by the Gelfand-Mazur theorem), and therefore any ''a'' in ''A'' gives rise to a complex-valued function on ''Y''. In the case of C*-algebras with unit, the spectrum map gives rise to a contravariant functor from the category of commutative C*-algebras with unit and unit-preserving continuous *-homomorphisms, to the category of compact Hausdorff spaces and continuous maps. This functor is one half of a contravariant equivalence between these two categories (its adjoint being the functor that assigns to each compact Hausdorff space ''X'' the C*-algebra ''C''0(''X'')). In particular, given compact Hausdorff spaces ''X'' and ''Y'', then ''C''(''X'') is isomorphic to ''C''(''Y'') (as a C*-algebra) if and only if ''X'' isApplications
One of the most significant applications is the existence of a continuous ''functional calculus'' for normal elements in C*-algebra ''A'': An element ''x'' is normal if and only if ''x'' commutes with its adjoint ''x*'', or equivalently if and only if it generates a commutative C*-algebra C*(''x''). By the Gelfand isomorphism applied to C*(''x'') this is *-isomorphic to an algebra of continuous functions on a locally compact space. This observation leads almost immediately to: Theorem. Let ''A'' be a C*-algebra with identity and ''x'' a normal element of ''A''. Then there is a *-morphism ''f'' → ''f''(''x'') from the algebra of continuous functions on the spectrum σ(''x'') into ''A'' such that * It maps 1 to the multiplicative identity of ''A''; * It maps the identity function on the spectrum to ''x''. This allows us to apply continuous functions to bounded normal operators on Hilbert space.References
* * * * {{Spectral theory Banach algebras C*-algebras Functional analysis Operator theory Von Neumann algebras