The relationship between
commutative von Neumann algebras and measure spaces is analogous to that between
commutative C*-algebras and
locally compact Hausdorff spaces. Every commutative von Neumann algebra on a separable Hilbert space is
isomorphic to
L∞(
X) for some standard measure space (
X, μ) and conversely, for every standard measure space
X,
L∞(
X) is a von Neumann algebra. This isomorphism as stated is an algebraic isomorphism. In fact we can state this more precisely as follows:
Theorem. Any abelian von Neumann algebra of operators on a separable Hilbert space is *-isomorphic to exactly one of the following • \ell^\infty(\{1,2, \ldots, n\}), \quad n \geq 1 • \ell^\infty(\mathbf{N}) • L^\infty([0,1]) • L^\infty([0,1] \cup \{1,2, \ldots, n\}), \quad n \geq 1 • L^\infty([0,1] \cup \mathbf{N}). The isomorphism can be chosen to preserve the
weak operator topology. In the above list, the unions are
disjoint unions, the interval [0,1] has
Lebesgue measure and the sets {1, 2, ...,
n} and
N have
counting measure. This classification is essentially a variant of
Maharam's classification theorem for separable measure algebras. The version of Maharam's
classification theorem that is most useful involves a point realization of the equivalence, and is somewhat of a
folk theorem. Although every standard measure space is isomorphic to one of the above and the list is exhaustive in this sense, there is a more canonical choice for the measure space in the case of abelian von Neumann algebras
A: The set of all projectors is a \sigma-complete Boolean algebra, that is a pointfree \sigma-algebra. In the special case A=L^\infty(X,\mathfrak{A},\mu) one recovers the abstract \sigma-algebra \mathfrak{A}/\{A \mid \mu(A)=0\}. This pointfree approach can be turned into a duality theorem analogue to Gelfand-duality between the category of abelian von Neumann algebras and the category of abstract \sigma-algebras. : Let μ and ν be
non-atomic probability measures on standard Borel spaces
X and
Y respectively. Then there is a μ null subset
N of
X, a ν null subset
M of
Y and a Borel isomorphism :: \phi: X \setminus N \rightarrow Y \setminus M, \quad :which carries μ into ν. Notice that in the above result, it is necessary to clip away sets of measure zero to make the result work. In the above theorem, the isomorphism is required to preserve the weak operator topology. As it turns out (and follows easily from the definitions), for algebras
L∞(
X, μ), the following topologies agree on norm bounded sets: • The weak operator topology on
L∞(
X, μ); • The ultraweak operator topology on
L∞(
X, μ); • The topology of weak* convergence on
L∞(
X, μ) considered as the dual space of
L1(
X, μ). However, for an abelian von Neumann algebra
A the realization of
A as an algebra of operators on a separable Hilbert space is highly non-unique. The complete classification of the
operator algebra realizations of
A is given by spectral
multiplicity theory and requires the use of
direct integrals. == Spatial isomorphism ==