each unitary U in M should leave invariant the graph of A defined by.
the projection onto G should lie in M2.
each unitary U in M should carry D, the domain of A, onto itself and satisfy UAU* = A there.
each unitary U in M' should commute with both operators in the polar decomposition of A.
The last condition follows by uniqueness of the polar decomposition. If A has a polar decomposition it says that the partial isometryV should lie in M and that the positive self-adjoint operator|A| should be affiliated with M. However, by the spectral theorem, a positive self-adjoint operator commutes with a unitary operator if and only if each of its spectral projections does. This gives another equivalent condition:
each spectral projection of |A| and the partial isometry in the polar decomposition of A lies in M.
Measurable operators
In general the operators affiliated with a von Neumann algebra M need not necessarily be well-behaved under either addition or composition. However in the presence of a faithful semi-finite normal trace τ and the standard Gelfand-Naimark-Segal action of M on H = L2, Edward Nelson proved that the measurable affiliated operators do form a *-algebra with nice properties: these are operators such that τ < ∞ for N sufficiently large. This algebra of unbounded operators is complete for a natural topology, generalising the notion of convergence in measure. It contains all the non-commutative Lpspaces defined by the trace and was introduced to facilitate their study. This theory can be applied when the von Neumann algebra M is type I or type II. When M = B acting on the Hilbert space L2 of Hilbert–Schmidt operators, it gives the well-known theory of non-commutative Lp spaces Lp due to Schatten and von Neumann. When M is in addition a finite von Neumann algebra, for example a type II1 factor, then every affiliated operator is automatically measurable, so the affiliated operators form a *-algebra, as originally observed in the first paper of Murray and von Neumann. In this case M is a von Neumann regular ring: for on the closure of its image|A| has a measurable inverse B and then T = BV* defines a measurable operator with ATA = A. Of course in the classical case when X is a probability space and M = L∞, we simply recover the *-algebra of measurable functions on X. If however M is type III, the theory takes a quite different form. Indeed in this case, thanks to the Tomita–Takesaki theory, it is known that the non-commutative Lp spaces are no longer realised by operators affiliated with the von Neumann algebra. As Connes showed, these spaces can be realised as unbounded operators only by using a certain positive power of the reference modular operator. Instead of being characterised by the simple affiliation relation UAU* = A, there is a more complicated bimodule relation involving the analytic continuation of the modular automorphism group.