The prototypical example of a Banach algebra is C_0(X), the space of (complex-valued) continuous functions, defined on a
locally compact Hausdorff space X, that
vanish at infinity. C_0(X) is unital if and only if X is
compact. The
complex conjugation being an
involution, C_0(X) is in fact a
C*-algebra. More generally, every C*-algebra is a Banach algebra by definition. • The set of real (or complex) numbers is a Banach algebra with norm given by the
absolute value. • The set of all real or complex n-by-n
matrices becomes a
unital Banach algebra if we equip it with a sub-multiplicative
matrix norm. • Take the Banach space \R^n (or \Complex^n) with norm \|x\| = \max_{} |x_i| and define multiplication componentwise: \left(x_1, \ldots, x_n\right) \left(y_1, \ldots, y_n\right) = \left(x_1 y_1, \ldots, x_n y_n\right). • The
quaternions form a 4-dimensional real Banach algebra, with the norm being given by the absolute value of quaternions. • The algebra of all bounded real- or complex-valued functions defined on some set (with pointwise multiplication and the
supremum norm) is a unital Banach algebra. • The algebra of all bounded
continuous real- or complex-valued functions on some
locally compact space (again with pointwise operations and supremum norm) is a Banach algebra. • The algebra of all
continuous linear operators on a Banach space E (with functional composition as multiplication and the
operator norm as norm) is a unital Banach algebra. The set of all
compact operators on E is a Banach algebra and closed ideal. It is without identity if \dim E = \infty. • If G is a
locally compact Hausdorff topological group and \mu is its
Haar measure, then the Banach space L^1(G) of all \mu-integrable functions on G becomes a Banach algebra under the
convolution x y(g) = \int x(h) y\left(h^{-1} g\right) d \mu(h) for x, y \in L^1(G). •
Uniform algebra: A Banach algebra that is a subalgebra of the complex algebra C(X) with the supremum norm and that contains the constants and separates the points of X (which must be a compact Hausdorff space). •
Natural Banach function algebra: A uniform algebra all of whose characters are evaluations at points of X. •
C*-algebra: A Banach algebra that is a closed *-subalgebra of the algebra of bounded operators on some
Hilbert space. •
Measure algebra: A Banach algebra consisting of all
Radon measures on some
locally compact group, where the product of two measures is given by
convolution of measures. • The algebra of the
quaternions \H is a real Banach algebra, but it is not a complex algebra (and hence not a complex Banach algebra) for the simple reason that the center of the quaternions is the real numbers, which cannot contain a copy of the complex numbers. • An
affinoid algebra is a certain kind of Banach algebra over a nonarchimedean field. Affinoid algebras are the basic building blocks in
rigid analytic geometry. ==Properties==