I was reading about the classification of unitary representations of $G=GL_2({\mathbb Q}_p)$ in Automorphic representations and ... by Goldfeld-Hundley yesterday and could not understand a very basic thing. I can see three sets of irreducible representations:
$S_1$ = {unitarizable smooth irreducible representations of $G$ over $\mathbb C$ up to an equivalence of representations},
$S_2$ = {unitary smooth irreducible representations of $G$ over $\mathbb C$ up to a unitary equivalence of representations},
$S_3$ = {Hilbert-irreducible representations of $G$ on Hilbert spaces over $\mathbb C$ up to a bounded equivalence}.
The difference is that in $S_2$ a Hermitian form is fixed, and in $S_3$ the space must be complete without closed invariant subspaces. They explain the classification for $S_1$: it falls into special, principal series and supercuspidal... classical stuff
There are natural functions forgetting the form $F: S_2 \rightarrow S_1$ and completion $C: S_2 \rightarrow S_3$.
Are $F$ and $C$ bijections? Where is it explained?