This is basically just out of curiosity. Also, since my research area is in von Neumann algebras and my knowledge of general Banach algebras as well as general Banach spaces is somewhat limited, I apologize in advance if this question has a well-known answer that I’m simply unaware of.
A result of Kadison from 1951 shows, among other things, that if $H, K$ are Hilbert spaces and $\phi: B(H) \to B(K)$ is an isometric isomorphism as Banach spaces, then $\phi$ is actually a $\ast$-isomorphism or $\ast$-anti-isomorphism (as von Neumann algebras), followed by multiplication on the left by a fixed unitary in $B(K)$. The proof is highly dependent on the $C^\ast$-structure. I’m wondering, however, if something like this is still true without assuming Hilbert spaces. Specifically,
- Is it true that, given two Banach spaces $E$, $F$ and an isometric isomorphism $\phi: B(E) \to B(F)$ as Banach spaces, $\phi$ is necessarily an isometric isomorphism or isometric anti-isomorphism as Banach algebras, followed by multiplication on the left by a fixed surjective isometry in $B(F)$?
- If 1 is not true in general, is it at least true that, if $B(E)$ and $B(F)$ are isometrically isomorphic as Banach spaces, then they are (isometrically) isomorphic or (isometrically) anti-isomorphic as Banach algebras?
- If 2 is not true in general, is there at least some natural class of Banach spaces (more general than just Hilbert spaces, of course) for which a result like 2 is true?
- Kadison’s result actually also showed that if any two $C^\ast$-algebras are isometrically isomorphic as Banach spaces, then they are isomorphic as Jordan algebras (i.e., there is a linear isomorphism preserving the Jordan product $a \circ b = \frac{ab + ba}{2}$). Does something like this hold for more general classes of Banach algebras? I’m aware that this cannot be true for all Banach algebras — $M^{2 \times 2}(\mathbb{C})$ with the Frobenius norm has two Banach algebra structures — the usual matrix multiplication and the Hadamard (i.e., entrywise) multiplication, whose associated Jordan algebra structures are different. But is there some natural class of Banach algebras, more general than $C^\ast$-algebras, for which this conclusion holds?