A
*-representation of a
C^*-algebra A on a
Hilbert space H is a
mapping \pi from A into the algebra of
bounded operators on H such that • \pi is a
ring homomorphism which carries
involution on A into involution on operators • \pi is
nondegenerate, that is the space of vectors \pi (x) \xi is dense as x ranges through A and \xi ranges through H. Note that if A has an identity, nondegeneracy means exactly \pi is unit-preserving, i.e. \pi 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 \pi of a C^*-algebra A on a Hilbert space H, an element \xi is called a
cyclic vector if the set of vectors :\{\pi(x)\xi:x\in A\} 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 Let \pi be a *-representation of a C^*-algebra A on the Hilbert space H and \xi be a unit norm cyclic vector for \pi. Then a \mapsto \langle \pi(a) \xi, \xi\rangle is a state of A. Conversely, every state of A may be viewed as a
vector state as above, under a suitable canonical representation. {{math proof | proof = {{ordered list Define on A a semi-definite
sesquilinear form \langle a, b \rangle =\rho(b^*a), \; a, b \in A. By the triangle inequality, the degenerate elements, a in A satisfying \rho(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 \rho). 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\langle a+I,b+I\rangle :=\rho(b^*a),\; a,b\in A, which is well-defined due to the
Cauchy–Schwarz inequality. The
Cauchy completion of A / I in the norm induced by this inner product is a Hilbert space, which we denote by H. Define the action \pi of A on A / I by \pi(a)(b+I) = ab+I of A on A / I. The same argument showing I is a left ideal also implies that \pi(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, \pi turns out to be *-preserving. This proves the existence of a *-representation \pi. If A has a multiplicative identity 1, then it is immediate that the equivalence class \xi 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 \{e_\lambda\} for A. Since positive linear functionals are bounded, the equivalence classes of the net \{e_\lambda\} converges to some vector \xi in H, which is a cyclic vector for \pi. It is clear from the definition of the inner product on the GNS Hilbert space H that the state \rho 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, \rho(a) = \langle \pi(a) \xi, \xi \rangle as seen in the theorem below.
Significance of the GNS construction 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 \Phi is the universal representation of a C^*-algebra A, the closure of \Phi(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 ==