The Atiyah conjecture and Artinian rings. (Q448496): Difference between revisions

From MaRDI portal
Importer (talk | contribs)
Changed an Item
Added link to MaRDI item.
links / mardi / namelinks / mardi / name
 

Revision as of 04:16, 30 January 2024

scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
The Atiyah conjecture and Artinian rings.
scientific article

    Statements

    The Atiyah conjecture and Artinian rings. (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    6 September 2012
    0 references
    Let \(l^2(G)\) be the Hilbert space over the complex numbers \(\mathbb C\) with orthonormal basis the elements of a group \(G\). So the elements of \(l^2(G)\) have the form \(\sum_{g\in G}a_gg\), where \(a_g\in\mathbb C\) and \(\sum_{g\in G}|a_g|^2<\infty\). Let \(\mathbf B\) denote the bounded linear operators on \(l^2(G)\). Then \(\mathbb CG\) acts faithfully on the left on \(l^2(G)\) as bounded linear operators via the left regular representation and we may consider \(\mathbb CG\) as a subalgebra of \(\mathbf B\). The weak closure of \(\mathbb CG\) in \(\mathbf B\) is the group von Neumann algebra \(N(G)\) of \(G\). Suppose that \(n\) is a positive integer and \(\alpha\in M_n(\mathbb CG)\). Then \(\alpha\) induces a bounded linear map \(\alpha\colon l^2(G)^n\to l^2(G)^n\), and \(\ker\alpha\) has a well-defined von Neumann dimension \(\dim_{N(G)}(\ker\alpha)\) that is a nonnegative real number. Let \(K\) be a subfield of \(\mathbb C\) that is closed under the complex conjugation. Assume that \(G\) is a group such that its finite subgroups have bounded orders and let \(\text{lcm}(G)\) be the lowest common multiple of the orders of the finite subgroups of \(G\). We say that the strong Atiyah conjecture holds for \(G\) over \(K\) if \(\text{lcm}(G)\dim_{N(G)}(\ker\alpha)\) is an integer for all \(\alpha\in M_n(KG)\). Let \(U(G)\) be the algebra of unbounded operators on \(l^2(G)\) affiliated to \(N(G)\). Let \(D(KG)\) be the division closure of \(KG\) in \(U(G)\), i.e. \(D(KG)\) is the smallest subring of \(U(G)\) that is closed under taking inverses. If the maximal FC-subgroup of \(G\) is torsion-free and \(d=\text{lcm}(G)<\infty\), then the main result asserts that \(G\) satisfies the strong Atiyah conjecture over \(K\) if and only if \(D(KG)\) is a \((d\times d)\)-matrix ring over a skew field. Let \(E(KG)\) be the extended division closure of \(KG\) in \(U(G)\), i.e. \(E(KG)\) is the smallest subring of \(U(G)\) containing \(KG\) with the properties: (a) \(x\in E(KG)\) and \(x^{-1}\in U(G)\) implies \(x^{-1}\in E(KG)\); (b) \(x\in E(KG)\) and \(xU(G)=eU(G)\), where \(e\) is a central idempotent of \(U(G)\), implies \(e\in E(KG)\). The second main result asserts that if \(G\) satisfies the strong Atiyah conjecture over \(K\), then \(E(KG)\) is a semisimple Artinian ring. Observe that this result follows immediately from a more general result of the authors.
    0 references
    orders of finite subgroups
    0 references
    algebras of unbounded operators
    0 references
    group von Neumann algebras
    0 references
    division closure
    0 references
    complex group algebras
    0 references
    Atiyah conjecture
    0 references
    matrix rings over skew fields
    0 references

    Identifiers

    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references