Partial isometry

In mathematical 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 the final subspace.Partial isometries appear in the polar decomposition.The concept of partial isometry can be defined in other equivalent ways.If U is an isometric map defined on a closed subset H1 of a Hilbert space H then we can define an extension W of U to all of H by the condition that W be zero on the orthogonal complement of H1.Thus a partial isometry is also sometimes defined as a closed partially defined isometric map.Partial isometries (and projections) can be defined in the more abstract setting of a semigroup with involution; the definition coincides with the one herein.In finite-dimensional vector spaces, a matrixis the projection onto its support.Contrast this with the more demanding definition of isometry: a matrixIn other words, an isometry is an injective partial isometry.Any finite-dimensional partial isometry can be represented, in some choice of basis, as a matrix of the formcolumns form an isometry, while all the other columns are identically 0.is a partial isometry, although not every partial isometry has this form, as shown explicitly in the given examples.For operator algebras one introduces the initial and final subspaces: For C*-algebras one has the chain of equivalences due to the C*-property: So one defines partial isometries by either of the above and declares the initial resp.final projection to be W*W resp.A pair of projections are partitioned by the equivalence relation: It plays an important role in K-theory for C*-algebras and in the Murray-von Neumann theory of projections in a von Neumann algebra.Any orthogonal projection is one with common initial and final subspace: Any isometric embedding is one with full initial subspace: Any unitary operator is one with full initial and final subspace: (Apart from these there are far more partial isometries.)On the two-dimensional complex Hilbert space the matrix is a partial isometry with initial subspace and final subspace Other possible examples in finite dimensions areThis is clearly not an isometry, because the columns are not orthonormal.However, its support is the span ofon this space, it becomes an isometry (and in particular, a unitary).Partial isometries do not necessarily correspond to squared matrices.This matrix has support the span of, and acts as an isometry (and in particular, as the identity) on this space.acts like a non-trivial isometry on its support, is, showing the isometric behavior ofOn the square summable sequences the operators which are related by are partial isometries with initial subspace and final subspace:
functional analysislinear mapHilbert spacesisometryorthogonal complementkernelpolar decompositionsemigroup with involutionoperator algebrasC*-algebrasequivalence relationK-theoryMurrayvon Neumannvon Neumann algebraunitary operatorProceedings of the National Academy of SciencesBibcodeWorld Scientific