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In mathematics, a von Neumann algebra or W*-algebra is a *-algebra of
bounded operators In functional analysis and operator theory, a bounded linear operator is a linear transformation L : X \to Y between topological vector spaces (TVSs) X and Y that maps bounded subsets of X to bounded subsets of Y. If X and Y are normed vector ...
on a Hilbert space that is closed in the
weak operator topology In functional analysis, the weak operator topology, often abbreviated WOT, is the weakest topology on the set of bounded operators on a Hilbert space H, such that the functional sending an operator T to the complex number \langle Tx, y\rangle is c ...
and contains the
identity operator Identity may refer to: * Identity document * Identity (philosophy) * Identity (social science) * Identity (mathematics) Arts and entertainment Film and television * ''Identity'' (1987 film), an Iranian film * ''Identity'' (2003 film) ...
. It is a special type of C*-algebra. Von Neumann algebras were originally introduced by
John von Neumann John von Neumann (; hu, Neumann János Lajos, ; December 28, 1903 – February 8, 1957) was a Hungarian-American mathematician, physicist, computer scientist, engineer and polymath. He was regarded as having perhaps the widest cove ...
, motivated by his study of single operators,
group representation In the mathematical field of representation theory, group representations describe abstract groups in terms of bijective linear transformations of a vector space to itself (i.e. vector space automorphisms); in particular, they can be used to ...
s, ergodic theory and
quantum mechanics Quantum mechanics is a fundamental theory in physics that provides a description of the physical properties of nature at the scale of atoms and subatomic particles. It is the foundation of all quantum physics including quantum chemistr ...
. His double commutant theorem shows that the analytic definition is equivalent to a purely algebraic definition as an algebra of symmetries. Two basic examples of von Neumann algebras are as follows: *The ring L^\infty(\mathbb R) of
essentially bounded Essence ( la, essentia) is a polysemic term, used in philosophy and theology as a designation for the property or set of properties that make an entity or substance what it fundamentally is, and which it has by necessity, and without which it ...
measurable functions on the real line is a commutative von Neumann algebra, whose elements act as
multiplication operator In operator theory, a multiplication operator is an operator defined on some vector space of functions and whose value at a function is given by multiplication by a fixed function . That is, T_f\varphi(x) = f(x) \varphi (x) \quad for all in th ...
s by pointwise multiplication on the Hilbert space L^2(\mathbb R) of square-integrable functions. *The algebra \mathcal B(\mathcal H) of all
bounded operator In functional analysis and operator theory, a bounded linear operator is a linear transformation L : X \to Y between topological vector spaces (TVSs) X and Y that maps bounded subsets of X to bounded subsets of Y. If X and Y are normed vector ...
s on a Hilbert space \mathcal H is a von Neumann algebra, non-commutative if the Hilbert space has dimension at least 2. Von Neumann algebras were first studied by in 1929; he and Francis Murray developed the basic theory, under the original name of rings of operators, in a series of papers written in the 1930s and 1940s (; ), reprinted in the collected works of . Introductory accounts of von Neumann algebras are given in the online notes of and and the books by , , and . The three volume work by gives an encyclopedic account of the theory. The book by discusses more advanced topics.


Definitions

There are three common ways to define von Neumann algebras. The first and most common way is to define them as
weakly closed In mathematics, weak topology is an alternative term for certain initial topologies, often on topological vector spaces or spaces of linear operators, for instance on a Hilbert space. The term is most commonly used for the initial topology of a ...
*-algebras of bounded operators (on a Hilbert space) containing the identity. In this definition the weak (operator) topology can be replaced by many other common topologies including the strong, ultrastrong or ultraweak operator topologies. The *-algebras of bounded operators that are closed in the norm topology are C*-algebras, so in particular any von Neumann algebra is a C*-algebra. The second definition is that a von Neumann algebra is a subalgebra of the bounded operators closed under
involution Involution may refer to: * Involute, a construction in the differential geometry of curves * '' Agricultural Involution: The Processes of Ecological Change in Indonesia'', a 1963 study of intensification of production through increased labour inpu ...
(the *-operation) and equal to its double commutant, or equivalently the commutant of some subalgebra closed under *. The
von Neumann double commutant theorem In mathematics, specifically functional analysis, the von Neumann bicommutant theorem relates the closure of a set of bounded operators on a Hilbert space in certain topologies to the bicommutant of that set. In essence, it is a connection betw ...
says that the first two definitions are equivalent. The first two definitions describe a von Neumann algebra concretely as a set of operators acting on some given Hilbert space. showed that von Neumann algebras can also be defined abstractly as C*-algebras that have a
predual In mathematics, the predual of an object ''D'' is an object ''P'' whose dual space is ''D''. For example, the predual of the space of bounded operators is the space of trace class In mathematics, specifically functional analysis, a trace-class o ...
; in other words the von Neumann algebra, considered as a Banach space, is the dual of some other Banach space called the predual. The predual of a von Neumann algebra is in fact unique up to isomorphism. Some authors use "von Neumann algebra" for the algebras together with a Hilbert space action, and "W*-algebra" for the abstract concept, so a von Neumann algebra is a W*-algebra together with a Hilbert space and a suitable faithful unital action on the Hilbert space. The concrete and abstract definitions of a von Neumann algebra are similar to the concrete and abstract definitions of a C*-algebra, which can be defined either as norm-closed *-algebras of operators on a Hilbert space, or as Banach *-algebras such that , , ''aa*'', , =, , ''a'', , , , ''a*'', , .


Terminology

Some of the terminology in von Neumann algebra theory can be confusing, and the terms often have different meanings outside the subject. *A factor is a von Neumann algebra with trivial center, i.e. a center consisting only of scalar operators. *A finite von Neumann algebra is one which is the
direct integral In mathematics and functional analysis a direct integral is a generalization of the concept of direct sum. The theory is most developed for direct integrals of Hilbert spaces and direct integrals of von Neumann algebras. The concept was introduced i ...
of finite factors (meaning the von Neumann algebra has a faithful normal tracial state τ: M →ℂ, see http://perso.ens-lyon.fr/gaboriau/evenements/IHP-trimester/IHP-CIRM/Notes=Cyril=finite-vonNeumann.pdf). Similarly, properly infinite von Neumann algebras are the direct integral of properly infinite factors. *A von Neumann algebra that acts on a separable Hilbert space is called separable. Note that such algebras are rarely separable in the norm topology. *The von Neumann algebra generated by a set of bounded operators on a Hilbert space is the smallest von Neumann algebra containing all those operators. *The tensor product of two von Neumann algebras acting on two Hilbert spaces is defined to be the von Neumann algebra generated by their algebraic tensor product, considered as operators on the Hilbert space tensor product of the Hilbert spaces. By
forgetting Forgetting or disremembering is the apparent loss or modification of information already encoded and stored in an individual's short or long-term memory. It is a spontaneous or gradual process in which old memories are unable to be recalled from ...
about the topology on a von Neumann algebra, we can consider it a (unital) *-algebra, or just a ring. Von Neumann algebras are semihereditary: every finitely generated submodule of a projective module is itself projective. There have been several attempts to axiomatize the underlying rings of von Neumann algebras, including Baer *-rings and
AW*-algebra In mathematics, an AW*-algebra is an algebraic generalization of a W*-algebra. They were introduced by Irving Kaplansky in 1951. As operator algebras, von Neumann algebras, among all C*-algebras, are typically handled using one of two means: they ...
s. The *-algebra of
affiliated operator In mathematics, affiliated operators were introduced by Murray and von Neumann in the theory of von Neumann algebras as a technique for using unbounded operators to study modules generated by a single vector. Later Atiyah and Singer showed that in ...
s of a finite von Neumann algebra is a
von Neumann regular ring In mathematics, a von Neumann regular ring is a ring ''R'' (associative, with 1, not necessarily commutative) such that for every element ''a'' in ''R'' there exists an ''x'' in ''R'' with . One may think of ''x'' as a "weak inverse" of the elemen ...
. (The von Neumann algebra itself is in general not von Neumann regular.)


Commutative von Neumann algebras

The relationship between
commutative In mathematics, a binary operation is commutative if changing the order of the operands does not change the result. It is a fundamental property of many binary operations, and many mathematical proofs depend on it. Most familiar as the name of ...
von Neumann algebras and measure spaces is analogous to that between commutative C*-algebras and locally compact
Hausdorff space In topology and related branches of mathematics, a Hausdorff space ( , ), separated space or T2 space is a topological space where, for any two distinct points, there exist neighbourhoods of each which are disjoint from each other. Of the m ...
s. Every commutative von Neumann algebra is isomorphic to ''L''(''X'') for some measure space (''X'', μ) and conversely, for every σ-finite measure space ''X'', the *-algebra ''L''(''X'') is a von Neumann algebra. Due to this analogy, the theory of von Neumann algebras has been called noncommutative measure theory, while the theory of C*-algebras is sometimes called noncommutative topology .


Projections

Operators ''E'' in a von Neumann algebra for which ''E'' = ''EE'' = ''E*'' are called projections; they are exactly the operators which give an orthogonal projection of ''H'' onto some closed subspace. A subspace of the Hilbert space ''H'' is said to belong to the von Neumann algebra ''M'' if it is the image of some projection in ''M''. This establishes a 1:1 correspondence between projections of ''M'' and subspaces that belong to ''M''. Informally these are the closed subspaces that can be described using elements of ''M'', or that ''M'' "knows" about. It can be shown that the closure of the image of any operator in ''M'' and the kernel of any operator in ''M'' belongs to ''M''. Also, the closure of the image under an operator of ''M'' of any subspace belonging to ''M'' also belongs to ''M''. (These results are a consequence of the
polar decomposition In mathematics, the polar decomposition of a square real or complex matrix A is a factorization of the form A = U P, where U is an orthogonal matrix and P is a positive semi-definite symmetric matrix (U is a unitary matrix and P is a positive se ...
).


Comparison theory of projections

The basic theory of projections was worked out by . Two subspaces belonging to ''M'' are called (Murray–von Neumann) equivalent if there is a partial isometry mapping the first isomorphically onto the other that is an element of the von Neumann algebra (informally, if ''M'' "knows" that the subspaces are isomorphic). This induces a natural equivalence relation on projections by defining ''E'' to be equivalent to ''F'' if the corresponding subspaces are equivalent, or in other words if there is a
partial isometry In functional analysis a partial isometry is a linear map between Hilbert spaces such that it is an isometry on the orthogonal complement of its kernel. The orthogonal complement of its kernel is called the initial subspace and its range is called ...
of ''H'' that maps the image of ''E'' isometrically to the image of ''F'' and is an element of the von Neumann algebra. Another way of stating this is that ''E'' is equivalent to ''F'' if ''E=uu*'' and ''F=u*u'' for some partial isometry ''u'' in ''M''. The equivalence relation ~ thus defined is additive in the following sense: Suppose ''E''1 ~ ''F''1 and ''E''2 ~ ''F''2. If ''E''1 ⊥ ''E''2 and ''F''1 ⊥ ''F''2, then ''E''1 + ''E''2 ~ ''F''1 + ''F''2. Additivity would ''not'' generally hold if one were to require unitary equivalence in the definition of ~, i.e. if we say ''E'' is equivalent to ''F'' if ''u*Eu'' = ''F'' for some unitary ''u''. The Schröder–Bernstein theorems for operator algebras gives a sufficient condition for Murray-von Neumann equivalence. The subspaces belonging to ''M'' are partially ordered by inclusion, and this induces a partial order ≤ of projections. There is also a natural partial order on the set of ''equivalence classes'' of projections, induced by the partial order ≤ of projections. If ''M'' is a factor, ≤ is a total order on equivalence classes of projections, described in the section on traces below. A projection (or subspace belonging to ''M'') ''E'' is said to be a finite projection if there is no projection ''F'' < ''E'' (meaning ''F'' ≤ ''E'' and ''F'' ≠ ''E'') that is equivalent to ''E''. For example, all finite-dimensional projections (or subspaces) are finite (since isometries between Hilbert spaces leave the dimension fixed), but the identity operator on an infinite-dimensional Hilbert space is not finite in the von Neumann algebra of all bounded operators on it, since it is isometrically isomorphic to a proper subset of itself. However it is possible for infinite dimensional subspaces to be finite. Orthogonal projections are noncommutative analogues of indicator functions in ''L''(R). ''L''(R) is the , , ·, , -closure of the subspace generated by the indicator functions. Similarly, a von Neumann algebra is generated by its projections; this is a consequence of the spectral theorem for self-adjoint operators. The projections of a finite factor form a continuous geometry.


Factors

A von Neumann algebra ''N'' whose
center Center or centre may refer to: Mathematics *Center (geometry), the middle of an object * Center (algebra), used in various contexts ** Center (group theory) ** Center (ring theory) * Graph center, the set of all vertices of minimum eccentrici ...
consists only of multiples of the identity operator is called a factor. showed that every von Neumann algebra on a separable Hilbert space is isomorphic to a
direct integral In mathematics and functional analysis a direct integral is a generalization of the concept of direct sum. The theory is most developed for direct integrals of Hilbert spaces and direct integrals of von Neumann algebras. The concept was introduced i ...
of factors. This decomposition is essentially unique. Thus, the problem of classifying isomorphism classes of von Neumann algebras on separable Hilbert spaces can be reduced to that of classifying isomorphism classes of factors. showed that every factor has one of 3 types as described below. The type classification can be extended to von Neumann algebras that are not factors, and a von Neumann algebra is of type X if it can be decomposed as a direct integral of type X factors; for example, every commutative von Neumann algebra has type I1. Every von Neumann algebra can be written uniquely as a sum of von Neumann algebras of types I, II, and III. There are several other ways to divide factors into classes that are sometimes used: * A factor is called discrete (or occasionally tame) if it has type I, and continuous (or occasionally wild) if it has type II or III. * A factor is called semifinite if it has type I or II, and purely infinite if it has type III. * A factor is called finite if the projection 1 is finite and properly infinite otherwise. Factors of types I and II may be either finite or properly infinite, but factors of type III are always properly infinite.


Type I factors

A factor is said to be of type I if there is a minimal projection ''E ≠ 0'', i.e. a projection ''E'' such that there is no other projection ''F'' with 0 < ''F'' < ''E''. Any factor of type I is isomorphic to the von Neumann algebra of ''all'' bounded operators on some Hilbert space; since there is one Hilbert space for every
cardinal number In mathematics, cardinal numbers, or cardinals for short, are a generalization of the natural numbers used to measure the cardinality (size) of sets. The cardinality of a finite set is a natural number: the number of elements in the set. T ...
, isomorphism classes of factors of type I correspond exactly to the cardinal numbers. Since many authors consider von Neumann algebras only on separable Hilbert spaces, it is customary to call the bounded operators on a Hilbert space of finite dimension ''n'' a factor of type I''n'', and the bounded operators on a separable infinite-dimensional Hilbert space, a factor of type I.


Type II factors

A factor is said to be of type II if there are no minimal projections but there are non-zero finite projections. This implies that every projection ''E'' can be “halved” in the sense that there are two projections ''F'' and ''G'' that are Murray–von Neumann equivalent and satisfy ''E'' = ''F'' + ''G''. If the identity operator in a type II factor is finite, the factor is said to be of type II1; otherwise, it is said to be of type II. The best understood factors of type II are the hyperfinite type II1 factor and the hyperfinite type II factor, found by . These are the unique hyperfinite factors of types II1 and II; there are an uncountable number of other factors of these types that are the subject of intensive study. proved the fundamental result that a factor of type II1 has a unique finite tracial state, and the set of traces of projections is ,1 A factor of type II has a semifinite trace, unique up to rescaling, and the set of traces of projections is ,∞ The set of real numbers λ such that there is an automorphism rescaling the trace by a factor of λ is called the fundamental group of the type II factor. The tensor product of a factor of type II1 and an infinite type I factor has type II, and conversely any factor of type II can be constructed like this. The fundamental group of a type II1 factor is defined to be the fundamental group of its tensor product with the infinite (separable) factor of type I. For many years it was an open problem to find a type II factor whose fundamental group was not the group of
positive reals In mathematics, the set of positive real numbers, \R_ = \left\, is the subset of those real numbers that are greater than zero. The non-negative real numbers, \R_ = \left\, also include zero. Although the symbols \R_ and \R^ are ambiguously used fo ...
, but Connes then showed that the von Neumann group algebra of a countable discrete group with
Kazhdan's property (T) In mathematics, a locally compact topological group ''G'' has property (T) if the trivial representation is an isolated point in its unitary dual equipped with the Fell topology. Informally, this means that if ''G'' acts unitarily on a Hilbert ...
(the trivial representation is isolated in the dual space), such as SL(3,Z), has a countable fundamental group. Subsequently,
Sorin Popa Sorin Teodor Popa (24 March 1953) is a Romanian American mathematician working on operator algebras. He is a professor at the University of California, Los Angeles. Biography Popa earned his PhD from the University of Bucharest in 1983 under the s ...
showed that the fundamental group can be trivial for certain groups, including the semidirect product of Z2 by SL(2,Z). An example of a type II1 factor is the von Neumann group algebra of a countable infinite discrete group such that every non-trivial conjugacy class is infinite. found an uncountable family of such groups with non-isomorphic von Neumann group algebras, thus showing the existence of uncountably many different separable type II1 factors.


Type III factors

Lastly, type III factors are factors that do not contain any nonzero finite projections at all. In their first paper were unable to decide whether or not they existed; the first examples were later found by . Since the identity operator is always infinite in those factors, they were sometimes called type III in the past, but recently that notation has been superseded by the notation IIIλ, where λ is a real number in the interval ,1 More precisely, if the Connes spectrum (of its modular group) is 1 then the factor is of type III0, if the Connes spectrum is all integral powers of λ for 0 < λ < 1, then the type is IIIλ, and if the Connes spectrum is all positive reals then the type is III1. (The Connes spectrum is a closed subgroup of the positive reals, so these are the only possibilities.) The only trace on type III factors takes value ∞ on all non-zero positive elements, and any two non-zero projections are equivalent. At one time type III factors were considered to be intractable objects, but
Tomita–Takesaki theory In the theory of von Neumann algebras, a part of the mathematical field of functional analysis, Tomita–Takesaki theory is a method for constructing modular automorphisms of von Neumann algebras from the polar decomposition of a certain involution ...
has led to a good structure theory. In particular, any type III factor can be written in a canonical way as the
crossed product In mathematics, and more specifically in the theory of von Neumann algebras, a crossed product is a basic method of constructing a new von Neumann algebra from a von Neumann algebra acted on by a group. It is related to the semidirect product ...
of a type II factor and the real numbers.


The predual

Any von Neumann algebra ''M'' has a predual ''M'', which is the Banach space of all ultraweakly continuous linear functionals on ''M''. As the name suggests, ''M'' is (as a Banach space) the dual of its predual. The predual is unique in the sense that any other Banach space whose dual is ''M'' is canonically isomorphic to ''M''. showed that the existence of a predual characterizes von Neumann algebras among C* algebras. The definition of the predual given above seems to depend on the choice of Hilbert space that ''M'' acts on, as this determines the ultraweak topology. However the predual can also be defined without using the Hilbert space that ''M'' acts on, by defining it to be the space generated by all positive normal linear functionals on ''M''. (Here "normal" means that it preserves suprema when applied to increasing nets of self adjoint operators; or equivalently to increasing sequences of projections.) The predual ''M'' is a closed subspace of the dual ''M*'' (which consists of all norm-continuous linear functionals on ''M'') but is generally smaller. The proof that ''M'' is (usually) not the same as ''M*'' is nonconstructive and uses the axiom of choice in an essential way; it is very hard to exhibit explicit elements of ''M*'' that are not in ''M''. For example, exotic positive linear forms on the von Neumann algebra ''l''(''Z'') are given by free ultrafilters; they correspond to exotic *-homomorphisms into ''C'' and describe the
Stone–Čech compactification In the mathematical discipline of general topology, Stone–Čech compactification (or Čech–Stone compactification) is a technique for constructing a universal map from a topological space ''X'' to a compact Hausdorff space ''βX''. The Ston ...
of ''Z''. Examples: #The predual of the von Neumann algebra ''L''(R) of essentially bounded functions on R is the Banach space ''L''1(R) of integrable functions. The dual of ''L''(R) is strictly larger than ''L''1(R) For example, a functional on ''L''(R) that extends the
Dirac measure In mathematics, a Dirac measure assigns a size to a set based solely on whether it contains a fixed element ''x'' or not. It is one way of formalizing the idea of the Dirac delta function, an important tool in physics and other technical fields. ...
δ0 on the closed subspace of bounded continuous functions ''C''0b(R) cannot be represented as a function in ''L''1(R). #The predual of the von Neumann algebra ''B''(''H'') of bounded operators on a Hilbert space ''H'' is the Banach space of all
trace class In mathematics, specifically functional analysis, a trace-class operator is a linear operator for which a trace may be defined, such that the trace is a finite number independent of the choice of basis used to compute the trace. This trace of trace ...
operators with the trace norm , , ''A'', , = Tr(, ''A'', ). The Banach space of trace class operators is itself the dual of the C*-algebra of compact operators (which is not a von Neumann algebra).


Weights, states, and traces

Weights and their special cases states and traces are discussed in detail in . *A weight ω on a von Neumann algebra is a linear map from the set of positive elements (those of the form ''a*a'') to ,∞ *A positive linear functional is a weight with ω(1) finite (or rather the extension of ω to the whole algebra by linearity). *A
state State may refer to: Arts, entertainment, and media Literature * ''State Magazine'', a monthly magazine published by the U.S. Department of State * ''The State'' (newspaper), a daily newspaper in Columbia, South Carolina, United States * ''Our S ...
is a weight with ω(1) = 1. *A trace is a weight with ω(''aa*'') = ω(''a*a'') for all ''a''. *A tracial state is a trace with ω(1) = 1. Any factor has a trace such that the trace of a non-zero projection is non-zero and the trace of a projection is infinite if and only if the projection is infinite. Such a trace is unique up to rescaling. For factors that are separable or finite, two projections are equivalent if and only if they have the same trace. The type of a factor can be read off from the possible values of this trace over the projections of the factor, as follows: *Type I''n'': 0, ''x'', 2''x'', ....,''nx'' for some positive ''x'' (usually normalized to be 1/''n'' or 1). *Type I: 0, ''x'', 2''x'', ....,∞ for some positive ''x'' (usually normalized to be 1). *Type II1: ,''x''for some positive ''x'' (usually normalized to be 1). *Type II: ,∞ *Type III: . If a von Neumann algebra acts on a Hilbert space containing a norm 1 vector ''v'', then the functional ''a'' → (''av'',''v'') is a normal state. This construction can be reversed to give an action on a Hilbert space from a normal state: this is the
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for normal states.


Modules over a factor

Given an abstract separable factor, one can ask for a classification of its modules, meaning the separable Hilbert spaces that it acts on. The answer is given as follows: every such module ''H'' can be given an ''M''-dimension dim''M''(''H'') (not its dimension as a complex vector space) such that modules are isomorphic if and only if they have the same ''M''-dimension. The ''M''-dimension is additive, and a module is isomorphic to a subspace of another module if and only if it has smaller or equal ''M''-dimension. A module is called standard if it has a cyclic separating vector. Each factor has a standard representation, which is unique up to isomorphism. The standard representation has an antilinear involution ''J'' such that ''JMJ'' = ''M′''. For finite factors the standard module is given by the
GNS construction GNS may refer to: Places * Binaka Airport, in Gunung Sitoli, Nias Island, Indonesia * Gainesville station (Georgia), an Amtrak station in Georgia, United States Companies and organizations * Gesellschaft für Nuklear-Service, a German nuclear ...
applied to the unique normal tracial state and the ''M''-dimension is normalized so that the standard module has ''M''-dimension 1, while for infinite factors the standard module is the module with ''M''-dimension equal to ∞. The possible ''M''-dimensions of modules are given as follows: *Type I''n'' (''n'' finite): The ''M''-dimension can be any of 0/''n'', 1/''n'', 2/''n'', 3/''n'', ..., ∞. The standard module has ''M''-dimension 1 (and complex dimension ''n''2.) *Type I The ''M''-dimension can be any of 0, 1, 2, 3, ..., ∞. The standard representation of ''B''(''H'') is ''H''⊗''H''; its ''M''-dimension is ∞. *Type II1: The ''M''-dimension can be anything in , ∞ It is normalized so that the standard module has ''M''-dimension 1. The ''M''-dimension is also called the coupling constant of the module ''H''. *Type II: The ''M''-dimension can be anything in , ∞ There is in general no canonical way to normalize it; the factor may have outer automorphisms multiplying the ''M''-dimension by constants. The standard representation is the one with ''M''-dimension ∞. *Type III: The ''M''-dimension can be 0 or ∞. Any two non-zero modules are isomorphic, and all non-zero modules are standard.


Amenable von Neumann algebras

and others proved that the following conditions on a von Neumann algebra ''M'' on a separable Hilbert space ''H'' are all equivalent: * ''M'' is hyperfinite or AFD or approximately finite dimensional or approximately finite: this means the algebra contains an ascending sequence of finite dimensional subalgebras with dense union. (Warning: some authors use "hyperfinite" to mean "AFD and finite".) *''M'' is amenable: this means that the
derivation Derivation may refer to: Language * Morphological derivation, a word-formation process * Parse tree or concrete syntax tree, representing a string's syntax in formal grammars Law * Derivative work, in copyright law * Derivation proceeding, a proc ...
s of ''M'' with values in a normal dual Banach bimodule are all inner. *''M'' has Schwartz's property P: for any bounded operator ''T'' on ''H'' the weak operator closed convex hull of the elements ''uTu*'' contains an element commuting with ''M''. *''M'' is semidiscrete: this means the identity map from ''M'' to ''M'' is a weak pointwise limit of completely positive maps of finite rank. *''M'' has property E or the Hakeda–Tomiyama extension property: this means that there is a projection of norm 1 from bounded operators on ''H'' to ''M'' '. *''M'' is injective: any completely positive linear map from any self adjoint closed subspace containing 1 of any unital C*-algebra ''A'' to ''M'' can be extended to a completely positive map from ''A'' to ''M''. There is no generally accepted term for the class of algebras above; Connes has suggested that amenable should be the standard term. The amenable factors have been classified: there is a unique one of each of the types I''n'', I, II1, II, IIIλ, for 0 < λ ≤ 1, and the ones of type III0 correspond to certain ergodic flows. (For type III0 calling this a classification is a little misleading, as it is known that there is no easy way to classify the corresponding ergodic flows.) The ones of type I and II1 were classified by , and the remaining ones were classified by , except for the type III1 case which was completed by Haagerup. All amenable factors can be constructed using the group-measure space construction of
Murray Murray may refer to: Businesses * Murray (bicycle company), an American manufacturer of low-cost bicycles * Murrays, an Australian bus company * Murray International Trust, a Scottish investment trust * D. & W. Murray Limited, an Australian who ...
and
von Neumann Von Neumann may refer to: * John von Neumann (1903–1957), a Hungarian American mathematician * Von Neumann family * Von Neumann (surname), a German surname * Von Neumann (crater), a lunar impact crater See also * Von Neumann algebra * Von Ne ...
for a single ergodic transformation. In fact they are precisely the factors arising as
crossed product In mathematics, and more specifically in the theory of von Neumann algebras, a crossed product is a basic method of constructing a new von Neumann algebra from a von Neumann algebra acted on by a group. It is related to the semidirect product ...
s by free ergodic actions of ''Z'' or ''Z/nZ'' on abelian von Neumann algebras ''L''(''X''). Type I factors occur when the measure space ''X'' is atomic and the action transitive. When ''X'' is diffuse or non-atomic, it is
equivalent Equivalence or Equivalent may refer to: Arts and entertainment *Album-equivalent unit, a measurement unit in the music industry * Equivalence class (music) *'' Equivalent VIII'', or ''The Bricks'', a minimalist sculpture by Carl Andre *''Equiva ...
to ,1as a measure space. Type II factors occur when ''X'' admits an
equivalent Equivalence or Equivalent may refer to: Arts and entertainment *Album-equivalent unit, a measurement unit in the music industry * Equivalence class (music) *'' Equivalent VIII'', or ''The Bricks'', a minimalist sculpture by Carl Andre *''Equiva ...
finite (II1) or infinite (II) measure, invariant under an action of ''Z''. Type III factors occur in the remaining cases where there is no invariant measure, but only an invariant measure class: these factors are called Krieger factors.


Tensor products of von Neumann algebras

The Hilbert space tensor product of two Hilbert spaces is the completion of their algebraic tensor product. One can define a tensor product of von Neumann algebras (a completion of the algebraic tensor product of the algebras considered as rings), which is again a von Neumann algebra, and act on the tensor product of the corresponding Hilbert spaces. The tensor product of two finite algebras is finite, and the tensor product of an infinite algebra and a non-zero algebra is infinite. The type of the tensor product of two von Neumann algebras (I, II, or III) is the maximum of their types. The commutation theorem for tensor products states that :(M\otimes N)^\prime = M^\prime\otimes N^\prime, where ''M''′ denotes the commutant of ''M''. The tensor product of an infinite number of von Neumann algebras, if done naively, is usually a ridiculously large non-separable algebra. Instead showed that one should choose a state on each of the von Neumann algebras, use this to define a state on the algebraic tensor product, which can be used to produce a Hilbert space and a (reasonably small) von Neumann algebra. studied the case where all the factors are finite matrix algebras; these factors are called Araki–Woods factors or ITPFI factors (ITPFI stands for "infinite tensor product of finite type I factors"). The type of the infinite tensor product can vary dramatically as the states are changed; for example, the infinite tensor product of an infinite number of type I2 factors can have any type depending on the choice of states. In particular found an uncountable family of non-isomorphic hyperfinite type IIIλ factors for 0 < λ < 1, called Powers factors, by taking an infinite tensor product of type I2 factors, each with the state given by: :x\mapsto \begin&0\\ 0&\\ \end x. All hyperfinite von Neumann algebras not of type III0 are isomorphic to Araki–Woods factors, but there are uncountably many of type III0 that are not.


Bimodules and subfactors

A bimodule (or correspondence) is a Hilbert space ''H'' with module actions of two commuting von Neumann algebras. Bimodules have a much richer structure than that of modules. Any bimodule over two factors always gives a subfactor since one of the factors is always contained in the commutant of the other. There is also a subtle relative tensor product operation due to Connes on bimodules. The theory of subfactors, initiated by Vaughan Jones, reconciles these two seemingly different points of view. Bimodules are also important for the von Neumann group algebra ''M'' of a discrete group Γ. Indeed, if ''V'' is any
unitary representation In mathematics, a unitary representation of a group ''G'' is a linear representation π of ''G'' on a complex Hilbert space ''V'' such that π(''g'') is a unitary operator for every ''g'' ∈ ''G''. The general theory is well-developed in case ''G ...
of Γ, then, regarding Γ as the diagonal subgroup of Γ × Γ, the corresponding
induced representation In group theory, the induced representation is a representation of a group, , which is constructed using a known representation of a subgroup . Given a representation of '','' the induced representation is, in a sense, the "most general" represe ...
on ''l''2 (Γ, ''V'') is naturally a bimodule for two commuting copies of ''M''. Important representation theoretic properties of Γ can be formulated entirely in terms of bimodules and therefore make sense for the von Neumann algebra itself. For example, Connes and Jones gave a definition of an analogue of
Kazhdan's property (T) In mathematics, a locally compact topological group ''G'' has property (T) if the trivial representation is an isolated point in its unitary dual equipped with the Fell topology. Informally, this means that if ''G'' acts unitarily on a Hilbert ...
for von Neumann algebras in this way.


Non-amenable factors

Von Neumann algebras of type I are always amenable, but for the other types there are an uncountable number of different non-amenable factors, which seem very hard to classify, or even distinguish from each other. Nevertheless, Voiculescu has shown that the class of non-amenable factors coming from the group-measure space construction is disjoint from the class coming from group von Neumann algebras of free groups. Later
Narutaka Ozawa (born 1974) is a Japanese mathematician, known for his work in operator algebras and discrete groups. He has been a professor at Kyoto University since 2013. He earned a bachelor's degree in mathematics in 1997 from the University of Tokyo and a ...
proved that group von Neumann algebras of
hyperbolic group In group theory, more precisely in geometric group theory, a hyperbolic group, also known as a ''word hyperbolic group'' or ''Gromov hyperbolic group'', is a finitely generated group equipped with a word metric satisfying certain properties abstra ...
s yield
prime A prime number (or a prime) is a natural number greater than 1 that is not a product of two smaller natural numbers. A natural number greater than 1 that is not prime is called a composite number. For example, 5 is prime because the only ways ...
type II1 factors, i.e. ones that cannot be factored as tensor products of type II1 factors, a result first proved by Leeming Ge for free group factors using Voiculescu's
free entropy A thermodynamic free entropy is an entropic thermodynamic potential analogous to the free energy. Also known as a Massieu, Planck, or Massieu–Planck potentials (or functions), or (rarely) free information. In statistical mechanics, free entropi ...
. Popa's work on fundamental groups of non-amenable factors represents another significant advance. The theory of factors "beyond the hyperfinite" is rapidly expanding at present, with many new and surprising results; it has close links with rigidity phenomena in
geometric group theory Geometric group theory is an area in mathematics devoted to the study of finitely generated groups via exploring the connections between algebraic properties of such group (mathematics), groups and topology, topological and geometry, geometric pro ...
and ergodic theory.


Examples

*The essentially bounded functions on a σ-finite measure space form a commutative (type I1) von Neumann algebra acting on the ''L''2 functions. For certain non-σ-finite measure spaces, usually considered
pathological Pathology is the study of the causes and effects of disease or injury. The word ''pathology'' also refers to the study of disease in general, incorporating a wide range of biology research fields and medical practices. However, when used in th ...
, ''L''(''X'') is not a von Neumann algebra; for example, the σ-algebra of measurable sets might be the countable-cocountable algebra on an uncountable set. A fundamental approximation theorem can be represented by the
Kaplansky density theorem In the theory of von Neumann algebras, the Kaplansky density theorem, due to Irving Kaplansky, is a fundamental approximation theorem. The importance and ubiquity of this technical tool led Gert Pedersen to comment in one of his books that, :''Th ...
. *The bounded operators on any Hilbert space form a von Neumann algebra, indeed a factor, of type I. *If we have any
unitary representation In mathematics, a unitary representation of a group ''G'' is a linear representation π of ''G'' on a complex Hilbert space ''V'' such that π(''g'') is a unitary operator for every ''g'' ∈ ''G''. The general theory is well-developed in case ''G ...
of a group ''G'' on a Hilbert space ''H'' then the bounded operators commuting with ''G'' form a von Neumann algebra ''G''′, whose projections correspond exactly to the closed subspaces of ''H'' invariant under ''G''. Equivalent subrepresentations correspond to equivalent projections in ''G''′. The double commutant ''G''′′ of ''G'' is also a von Neumann algebra. * The von Neumann group algebra of a discrete group ''G'' is the algebra of all bounded operators on ''H'' = ''l''2(''G'') commuting with the action of ''G'' on ''H'' through right multiplication. One can show that this is the von Neumann algebra generated by the operators corresponding to multiplication from the left with an element ''g'' ∈ ''G''. It is a factor (of type II1) if every non-trivial conjugacy class of ''G'' is infinite (for example, a non-abelian free group), and is the hyperfinite factor of type II1 if in addition ''G'' is a union of finite subgroups (for example, the group of all permutations of the integers fixing all but a finite number of elements). *The tensor product of two von Neumann algebras, or of a countable number with states, is a von Neumann algebra as described in the section above. *The
crossed product In mathematics, and more specifically in the theory of von Neumann algebras, a crossed product is a basic method of constructing a new von Neumann algebra from a von Neumann algebra acted on by a group. It is related to the semidirect product ...
of a von Neumann algebra by a discrete (or more generally locally compact) group can be defined, and is a von Neumann algebra. Special cases are the group-measure space construction of Murray and
von Neumann Von Neumann may refer to: * John von Neumann (1903–1957), a Hungarian American mathematician * Von Neumann family * Von Neumann (surname), a German surname * Von Neumann (crater), a lunar impact crater See also * Von Neumann algebra * Von Ne ...
and Krieger factors. *The von Neumann algebras of a measurable equivalence relation and a measurable
groupoid In mathematics, especially in category theory and homotopy theory, a groupoid (less often Brandt groupoid or virtual group) generalises the notion of group in several equivalent ways. A groupoid can be seen as a: *'' Group'' with a partial func ...
can be defined. These examples generalise von Neumann group algebras and the group-measure space construction.


Applications

Von Neumann algebras have found applications in diverse areas of mathematics like knot theory, statistical mechanics, quantum field theory, local quantum physics,
free probability Free probability is a mathematical theory that studies non-commutative random variables. The "freeness" or free independence property is the analogue of the classical notion of independence, and it is connected with free products. This theory was in ...
,
noncommutative geometry Noncommutative geometry (NCG) is a branch of mathematics concerned with a geometric approach to noncommutative algebras, and with the construction of ''spaces'' that are locally presented by noncommutative algebras of functions (possibly in some g ...
,
representation theory Representation theory is a branch of mathematics that studies abstract algebraic structures by ''representing'' their elements as linear transformations of vector spaces, and studies modules over these abstract algebraic structures. In essen ...
, differential geometry, and
dynamical system In mathematics, a dynamical system is a system in which a function describes the time dependence of a point in an ambient space. Examples include the mathematical models that describe the swinging of a clock pendulum, the flow of water in ...
s. For instance, C*-algebra provides an alternative axiomatization to probability theory. In this case the method goes by the name of
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 '' ...
. This is analogous to the two approaches to measure and integration, where one has the choice to construct measures of sets first and define integrals later, or construct integrals first and define set measures as integrals of characteristic functions.


See also

* *
Central carrier In the context of von Neumann algebras, the central carrier of a projection ''E'' is the smallest central projection, in the von Neumann algebra, that dominates ''E''. It is also called the central support or central cover. Definition Let ''L''( ...
*


References

* *, * *. * (A translation of , the first book about von Neumann algebras.) *; incomplete notes from a course. *. * * A historical account of the discovery of von Neumann algebras. *. This paper gives their basic properties and the division into types I, II, and III, and in particular finds factors not of type I. *. This is a continuation of the previous paper, that studies properties of the trace of a factor. *. This studies when factors are isomorphic, and in particular shows that all approximately finite factors of type II1 are isomorphic. * * * * * *. The original paper on von Neumann algebras. *. This defines the ultrastrong topology. *. This discusses infinite tensor products of Hilbert spaces and the algebras acting on them. *. This shows the existence of factors of type III. *. This shows that some apparently topological properties in von Neumann algebras can be defined purely algebraically. *. This discusses how to write a von Neumann algebra as a sum or integral of factors. *. Reprints von Neumann's papers on von Neumann algebras. * {{Authority control Operator theory * John von Neumann