Let $M$ be a **positive semidefinite** operator on a complex Hilbert space $(F,\langle\cdot,\cdot\rangle)$. On the quotient space $F/\text{Ker}(M)$ we have the following inner product $$\langle \overline{x},\overline{y}\rangle = \langle Mx,y\rangle,$$ for all $\overline{x},\overline{y}\in F/\text{Ker}(M)$. Following some papers, the following theorem figures in [this book] (chapter: Appendix on square summable power series). > **Theorem:** The completion of $F/\text{Ker}(M)$ denoted $\overline{F/\text{Ker}(M)}$ is isometrically isomorphic to the Hilbert space $\text{Im}(M^{1/2})$ with the inner product $$( M^{1/2}x,M^{1/2}y)=\langle P_{\overline{\text{Im}(M)}}x, P_{\overline{\text{Im}(M)}}y\rangle,\;\forall\, x,y \in F.$$ $P_{\overline{\text{Im}(M)}}$ is the orthogonal projection onto $\overline{\text{Im}(M)}$. I hope to get a proof or a sketch of proof of the above theorem. Clearly $$M^{1/2}:(\overline{\text{Im}(M)},\langle\cdot,\cdot\rangle)\to \text{Im}(M^{1/2}),$$ is an isomorphism. So in order to prove the theorem it suffices to show that > The completion of $F/\text{Ker}(M)$ is isomorphic to $(\overline{\text{Im}(M)}, \langle\cdot,\cdot\rangle)$. Is this claim true? [this book]: https://www.amazon.com/PERTURBATION-THEORY-APPLICATIONS-QUANTUM-MECHANICS/dp/B000VJD14C