Quote
"Now one final remark on the term spectrum. In physics each type of atom or molecule possesses a characteristic spectrum formed by its emission or absorption lines. Quantum mechanics interprets these as the characteristic values of an operator, the Hamiltonian, acting on a certain Hilbert space. It is thus natural to speak of the discrete spectrum of the Hamiltonian. The emission or absorption bands correspond to a continuous spectrum. In the early 1930s von Neumann succeeded brilliantly in defining the concept of a self-adjoint (unbounded) operator H on a Hilbert space 𝔥 and its spectrums. The contribution of Gelfand in 1940 was in associating a commutative Banach algebra A with the operator H and an isomorphism of A onto C0(S;\mathbb{C}). From that point on the evolution of the meaning of the word spectrum can be understood. For Grothendieck the spectrum of a commutative ring consists of its prime ideals (as in the case of Dedekind)."
P
Pierre Cartier (mathematician)




