The week will be the capstone
conference of the Program. The conference will run Monday through Friday with
the following approximate daily schedule:
Monday, June 24
Room 230, Fields Institute
|
9:10 - 10:00
|
Richard Kadison (University of Pennsylvania)
Foundations of the Theory of Murray-von Neumann
Algebras |
10:10 - 11:00
|
Stanisław Woronowicz (University of Warsaw)
Wave operators and quantum groups in the C*-setting |
11:00 - 11:30
|
Break |
11:30 - 12:20
|
Xiang Tang (Washington University)
Equivariant quantization and K-theory |
|
Lunch Break |
2:00 - 2:50
|
Philip Green (University of Washington)
Math vs. Biology |
3:00 - 3:30
|
Tea Break |
3:30 - 5:45
|
Seminar Session
Chair: Ian Putnam (University of Victoria)
Speakers: Robin Deeley (Georg-August Universität, Göttingen)
A geometric version of the analytic surgery exact sequence
Snigdhayan Mahanta (University of Muenster)
Bivariant theories for C*-algebras
Franz Luef (UC Berkeley)
Noncommutative geometry and time-frequency analysis |
Tuesday, June 25
Room 230, Fields Institute
|
9:10 - 10:00
|
Nigel Higson (Pennsylvania State University)
Noncommutative Geometry of Parabolic Induction and
Parabolic Restriction |
10:10 - 11:00
|
Marco Gualtieri (University of Toronto)
The Stokes Groupoids |
11:00 - 11:30
|
Break |
11:30 - 12:20
|
Alan Carey (Australian National University)
Scattering theory and Noncommutative Geometry |
|
Lunch break |
2:00 - 2:50
|
Paul Baum (Pennsylvania State University)
Exact crossed products: a counter-example revisited |
3:00 - 3:30
|
Tea Break |
3:30 - 5:45
|
Seminar Session
Chair: Hanfeng Li (University of Buffalo)
Speakers: Zhiqiang Li (University of Toronto)
KK-lifting problem and order structure on K-groups
Luis Santiago Moreno (University of Oregon)
Classification of actions of finite abelian groups
on AI-algebras
Mira Peterka (University of Kansas)
Complex Vector Bundles over Higher-Dimensional Connes-Landi
Spheres
Albert Sheu (University of Kansas)
The structure of quantum line bundles over quantum
teardrops |
Wednesday, June 26
Bahen Building, Room 1180(map)
|
9:10 - 10:00
|
Sergey Neshveyev (University of Oslo)
Cocycle deformation of operator algebras |
10:10 - 11:00
|
Alfons Van Daele (University of Leuven,
Belgium)
The Larson-Sweedler theorem and the operator algebra
approach to quantum groups |
11:00 - 11:30
|
Break |
11:30 - 12:20
|
Bahram Rangipour (University of New Brunswick)
The twisted local index formula is primary |
|
Lunch Break |
2:00 - 2:50
|
Marc Rieffel (University of California,
Berkeley)
Noncommutative resistance networks |
3:00 - 3:30
|
Tea Break |
3:30 - 5:45
|
Seminar Session
Chair: Piotr M. Hajac (Poland)
Speakers: Paweł Kasprzak (University of Warsaw / Polish Academy
of Sciences)
Rieffel deformation via crossed products
Adam Skalski (Polish Academy of Sciences / University of Warsaw)
Spectral triples on crossed products by equicontinuous
actions
Piotr M. Sołtan (University of Warsaw)
Embeddable quantum homogeneous spaces
|
6:00 - 9:00
|
Banquet
-at the University of Toronto Faculty Club
Banquet
tickets may be purchased at Fields by June 24, 90CDN
each, or by contacting thematic<at>fields.utoronto.ca.
The
organizers have offered to subsidize junior participants, so that post-docs
pay 60CDN each, and students pay 30CDN each. |
Thursday, June 27
Bahen Building, Room 1180 (map)
|
9:10 - 10:00
|
Max Karoubi (Université
Paris 7)
Algebraic and Hermitian K-theory of stable algebras |
10:10 - 11:00
|
Guoliang Yu (Texas A&M University)
K-theory of C*- algebras associated to Hilbert manifolds
and applications |
11:00 - 11:30
|
Break |
11:30 - 12:20
|
Judith Packer (University of Colorado at Boulder)
Projective multi-resolution analyses: origins and
recent developments
|
|
Lunch break |
2:00 - 2:50
|
Erik van Erp (University of Hawaii at
Manoa)
Some fundamental problems in the index theory of
non-elliptic Fredholm operators |
3:00 - 3:30
|
Tea Break |
3:30 - 5:45
|
Seminar Session
Chair: Jonathan Rosenberg (University of Maryland)
Speakers: Alex Kumjian (University of Nevada, Reno)
Groupoid actions on fractifold bundles
Jean Renault (University of Orleans)
Groupoids and beyond
Chris Phillips (University of Oregon)
Large subalgebras
Dana Williams (Dartmouth College)
Inducing irreducible representations |
Friday, June 28
Room 230, Fields Institute
|
9:10 - 10:00
|
Heath Emerson (University of Victoria)
K-theory and the Lefschetz fixedpoint formula |
10:10 - 11:00
|
Andreas Thom (Universität
Leipzig) (slides)
Entropy, Determinants, and ${L^2}$-Torsion |
11:00 - 11:30
|
Break |
11:30 - 12:20
|
Bruce Blackadar (University of Nevada, Reno)
Dimension theory for C*-algebras |
|
Lunch Break |
2:00 - 2:50
|
Branimir Čačić(Cal Tech)
Towards a reconstruction theorem for toric noncommutative
manifolds |
3:00 - 3:30
|
Tea Break |
3:30 - 5:45
|
Seminar Session
Chair: George Elliott (Toronto)
Speakers: Alan Lai (California Institute of Technology)
Toward understanding the space of
connections
Karen Strung (University of Muenster)
On the classification of C*-algebras of minimal
dynamical systems of a product of the Cantor set and an odd dimensional
sphere
Olivier Gabriel (Goettingen University) (slides)
Spectral triples on Lie groups and generalized crossed products
Qingyun Wang (Washington University in St Louis, about to join University
of Toronto)
Rokhlin properties and non-commutative dimension
|
Speaker |
Title and Abstract |
Paul Baum
Pennsylvania State University |
Exact crossed products: a counter-example revisited
The left side of BC (Baum-Connes) with coefficients sees
any group as if the group were exact. This talk will indicate how to
make a change in the right side of BC with coefficients so that the
right side also sees any group as if the group were exact.
This corrected form of BC with coefficients uses the unique minimal
exact intermediate crossed-product. For exact groups (i.e., all groups
except the Gromov group) there is no change in BC with coefficients.
In the corrected form of BC with coefficients the Gromov group acting
on the coefficient algebra obtained from an expander is not a counter-example.
Thus at the present time (June, 2013) there is no known counter-example
to the corrected form of BC with coefficients. The above is joint work
with E. Kirchberg and R. Willett. This work is based on and inspired
by a result of R. Willett and G. Yu.
|
Bruce Blackadar
University of Nevada, Reno |
Dimension theory for C*-algebras
We will survey the various noncommutative versions of dimension
for C*-algebras and their applications, beginning with Rieffel's stable
rank. Other dimension theories include real rank, tracial rank, decomposition
rank, and nuclear dimension, all of which have different applications.
Uses of these theories in the structure of approximately homogeneous
C*-algebras will be discussed, including approximate divisibility and
Z-stability. Finally, we discuss stability questions, the Cuntz semigroup,
and radius of comparison.
|
Branimir Čačić
Cal Tech |
Towards a reconstruction theorem for toric noncommutative manifolds
A toric noncommutative manifold is a spectral triple obtained
from a commutative spectral triple by applying Rieffel's strict deformation
quantisation to its algebra. We discuss work in progress towards extending
Connes' reconstruction theorem for commutative spectral triples to a
reconstruction theorem for toric noncommutative manifolds.
|
Alan Carey
Australian National University
Lecture Notes
|
Scattering theory and Noncommutative Geometry
This talk outlines work in progress on connections between
index theory and scattering theory.
|
Heath Emerson
University of Victoria
Lecture Notes
|
K-theory and the Lefschetz fixedpoint formula
We describe a generalization of the Lefschetz fixed-point
formula. The formula equates two invariants of a smooth, G-equivariant
self-correspondence of a smooth compact manifold, where G is a compact
group. As in the classical formula, one of our invariants is local and
geometric and is based on a self-intersection construction, and the
other is global and homological, and depends, roughly speaking, only
on the R(G)-module trace of the R(G)-module map on equivariant K-theory
induced by the correspondence.
|
Philip Green
University of Washington |
Math vs. Biology
I will discuss my scientific journey from being a student
of Marc Rieffel to working on genomics, and lessons learned along the
way.
|
Marco Gualtieri
University of Toronto
|
The Stokes Groupoids
We construct and describe a family of groupoids over complex
curves which serve as the universal domains of definition for solutions
to linear ordinary differential equations with singularities. As a consequence,
we obtain a direct, functorial method for resumming formal solutions
to such equations.
|
Nigel Higson
Pennsylvania State University |
Noncommutative Geometry of Parabolic Induction and Parabolic Restriction
In his influential work from the 1970s, Marc Rieffel explained
how unitary induction can be neatly framed within ${C^*}$-algebras by
using Hilbert modules and the concept of Morita equivalence. In the
last several years, Pierre Clare has begun to study parabolic induction,
which is the mainstay of Harish-Chandra-style representation theory,
from the same ${C^*}$-algebraic point of view. I shall introduce Pierres
basic construction, and then consider the problem of framing parabolic
restriction within ${C^*}$-algebra theory. For tempered representations
roughly speaking, for the reduced rather than the full group
${C^*}$-algebra one can expect adjunction relations between parabolic
induction and restriction. The investigation of these relations leads
to some interesting asymptotic geometry for SL(2,${\mathbb{R}}$)
this is the geometry of the wave equation on the hyperbolic plane. An
as-yet poorly understood issue is that the constructions involve the
smooth structure of the tempered dual, as captured by a smooth subalgebra,
and not just the topology, as captured by the reduced ${C^*}$-algebra.
|
Richard Kadison
University of Pennsylvania |
Foundations of the Theory of Murray-von Neumann Algebras
F. J. Murray and J. von Neumann introduced the family of
unbounded, closed, densely-defined operators that are closely associated
(affiliated as they termed them) with a finite von Neumann
algebra. They proved that they have remarkable common, dense domain
properties and described surprising addition and multiplication operations
for them. Zhe Liu and the speaker have defined algebras based on these
operations, Murray-von Neumann algebras, and studied their basic structure.
This will be discussed during the lecture with special emphasis on the
nature of the derivations of these algebras.
|
Max Karoubi
Université Paris 7
|
Algebraic and Hermitian K-theory of stable algebras
This is joint work with Mariusz Wodzicki. It was conjectured
in 1978 that algebraic K-theory and topological K-theory coincide on
the category of stable complex ${C^*}$-algebras. This conjecture was
proved by Suslin and Wodzicki about 20 years ago. In this lecture we
give another proof of the conjecture which may be applied to stable
real ${C^*}$-algebras or Banach algebras like the algebra of compact
operators in a separable real Hilbert space. We apply our new method
to compute also Hermitian K-theory of a large class of operator algebras
by a comparison theorem involving the topological analog.
|
Paweł Kasprzak University
of Warsaw |
Rieffel deformation via crossed products
The aim of this talk is to present a description of the Rieffel
deformation in the crossed product terms. The starting point of our
construction is an action of an abelian group G on a C*-algebra A. The
crossed product algebra of A by the action of G is canonically equipped
with the dual action of the dual group of G. The algebra A can be embedded
into this crossed product and it is characterized by the Landstad conditions,
one of which is the invariance with respect to the dual action. Using
a 2-cocycle on the dual group one can deform the dual action and the
Rieffel deformation of A is defined as the Landstad algebra for this
deformed dual action. A particular benefits of our approach are immediate
proofs of invariance of K-groups and preservation of nuclearity under
the Rieffel deformation.
|
Alan Lai
California Institute of Technology |
Toward understanding the space of connections
What do people mean when they integrate over a large space
like the connection space? Inspired by the formal definition of a path
integral, I attempt to give an interpretation on a measure of the
connection space in loop quantum gravity literature. I will end with
a natural way of interpreting a connection as an operator on a Hilbert
space.
|
Franz Luef
UC Berkeley
Lectures Notes
|
Noncommutative geometry and time-frequency analysis
In this talk I describe a link between projective modules
over noncommutative tori and time-frequency analysis, where they are
known as Gabor frames and are of relevance in wireless communication.
The main focus will be on properties of Gabor frames that follow from
the existence of Hermitian connections on projective modules over noncommutative
tori.
|
Zhiqiang Li
University of Toronto
Lecture Notes
|
KK-lifting problem and order structure on K-groups
We investigate the KK-lifting problem for ${C^*}$-algebras,
namely, the problem which KK-class is representable by a *-homomorphism
between the algebras (allowing the tensor product with a matrix algebra
for the codomain algebra). This problem not only makes sense in its
own right, but also has application to the classification of ${C^*}$-algebras.
To be more precise, we look at this problem for dimension drop interval
algebras (with possibly different dimension drops at the endpoints).
It turns out that there exist KK-elements between two such algebras
which preserve the Dadarlat-Loring order on K-theory with coefficients,
but can not be lifted to a *-homomorphism between the algebras. This
is different from the equal dimension drop case, as shown by S. Eilers.This
is a joint work with George A. Elliott.
|
Snigdhayan Mahanta
University of Muenster |
Bivariant theories for C*-algebras
Bivariant theories are two variable theories which provide
an axiomatic framework to study E-theory and (local) cyclic homology
theory amongst others. One fundamental example of such a theory is noncommutative
stable homotopy, which has received much less attention in the literature.
It is a sharper invariant than E-theory (or KK-theory for nuclear C*-algebras)
and hence deserves a closer look. Standard constructions view them as
Hom-groups of certain triangulated categories. I will demonstrate that
they have a higher categorical origin and the noncommutative stable
homotopy groups are simply the ordinary homotopy groups of this higher
category. This construction will be applied to address some questions
on the global aspects of noncommutative stable homotopy.
|
Luis Santiago Moreno
University of Oregon |
Classification of actions of finite abelian groups on AI-algebras
In this talk, I will introduce an equivariant version of the
Cuntz semigroup. Then I will discuss some of its properties. I will
show that if G is a compact group then the equivariant Cuntz semigroup
of a G-${C^*}$-algebra is naturally isomorphic to the Cuntz semigroup
of the associated crossed product ${C^*}$-algebra. I will also explain
how this semigroup can be used to classify actions of finite abelian
groups on AI-algebras with the Rokhlin property. This is a joint work
with Eusebio Gardella.
|
Sergey Neshveyev
University of Oslo |
Cocycle deformation of operator algebras
Given a ${C^*}$-algebra A with an action of a locally compact
quantum group G on it and a unitary 2-cocycle ${\Omega}$ on ${\hat{G}}$,
we define a deformation ${A_\Omega}$ of A. We will be particularly interested
in the cases when G is either a genuine group or a group dual. The construction
behaves well under the regularity assumption on ${\Omega}$, meaning
that ${C_0 (G)_\Omega \rtimes G}$ is isomorphic to the algebra of compact
operators on some Hilbert space. In particular, then ${A_\Omega}$ is
stably isomorphic to the iterated twisted crossed product ${G^{op}\rtimes_\Omega
G \rtimes A}$. Also, in good situations, the ${C^*}$-algebra ${A_\Omega}$
carries a left action of the deformed quantum group ${G_\Omega}$ and
we have an isomorphism ${G_\Omega \rtimes A_\Omega \cong G \rtimes A}$.
As examples we consider Rieffels deformation and deformations
by cocycles on the duals of some solvable Lie groups recently constructed
by Bieliavsky and Gayral. (Joint work with J. Bhowmick, L. Tuset and
A. Sangha.)
|
Mira Peterka
University of Kansas |
Complex Vector Bundles over Higher-Dimensional Connes-Landi Spheres
We classify and construct (up to isomorphism) all finitely-generated
projective modules over higher-dimensional Connes-Landi spheres for
totally irrational values of the deformation parameter.
|
Judith Packer
University of Colorado, Boulder |
Projective multi-resolution
analyses: origins and recent developments
In January 1997, Marc Rieffel gave a talk at a special session of
the Joint Annual Meetings entitled Multiwavelets and operator
algebras, which related wavelet theory to the K-theory of the
(commutative) torus. Rieffels talk related the multiresolution
analysis theory of wavelets due to S. Mallat and Y.Meyer to a nested
sequence of Hilbert modules over continuous functions on the torus,
and the theory of projective multi-resolution analyses had its origins
here. The talk today will relate some of this theory, as well as discussing
some recent developments due to B. Purkis of the University of Colorado,
Boulder.
|
Bahram Rangipour
University of New Brunswick |
The twisted local index formula is primary
In this talk we introduce a new Hopf algebra with a characteristic
map that captures the twisted local index formula on the groupoid action
algebra. In contrast with the Connes-Moscovici Hopf algebra the cohomology
of this new
Hopf algebra is comprised of all universal Chern classes. This proves
that the cyclic cohomology class of the twisted index cocycle is primary.
The talk is based on the collaboration with Henri Moscovici.
|
Marc Rieffel
University of California, Berkeley |
Noncommutative resistance networks
To avoid the technicalities of unbounded operators and their
dense domains, in this talk I will deal only with finite-dimensional
C*-algebras. I will introduce what I am calling a Riemannian metric
over such an algebra A. When A is commutative I will indicate how we
essentially obtain a (finite) resistance network. I will describe interesting
non-commutative examples. In particular, in our setting every spectral
triple determines a Riemannian metric. I will sketch how from a Riemannian
metric we obtain further interesting structures, such as Laplace operators,
seminorms equipping A with the structure of a quantum metric space,
and corresponding metrics on the state space. These seminorms have surprisingly
strong properties. I will also mention how this setup is closely related
to Dirichlet forms and quantum semigroups.
|
Albert Sheu
University of Kansas |
The structure of quantum line bundles
over quantum teardrops
Over the quantum weighted 1-dimensional complex projective
spaces, called quantum teardrops, the quantum line bundles associated
with the quantum principal U(1)-bundles introduced and studied by Brzezinski
and Fairfax are explicitly identified among the finitely generated projective
modules which are classified up to isomorphism.
|
Adam Skalski
Polish Academy of Sciences / University of Warsaw |
Spectral triples on crossed products by equicontinuous actions
I will discuss a method of constructing spectral triples on
crossed products by actions of discrete groups, inspired by the Kasparov
product. A sufficient condition for the method to work, introduced by
Jean Belissard, Mathilde Marcolli and Kamran Reihani for actions of
Z, turns out to be closely related with the topological equicontinuity
of the action, if only the original triple is Lipschitz regular (in
the sense of Rieffel). I will also present certain examples and further
related problems. (Joint work with Andrew Hawkins, Stuart White and
Joachim Zacharias.)
|
Piotr M. Sołtan University
of Warsaw |
Embeddable quantum homogeneous spaces
I will review some aspect of the theory of noncommutative
(or quantum) homogeneous spaces and describe a natural class of such
objects which in joint work with P. Kasprzak we called "embeddable"
following the original use of this term by Podleś. Along the way
I will devote some attention to a von Neumann algebraic version of this
theory which exhibits an interesting duality. As an example I will shed
some light on the concept of the diagonal subgroup of the direct product
of a quantum group with itself.
|
Karen Strung University
of Muenster |
On the classification of C*-algebras
of minimal dynamical systems of a product of the Cantor set and an odd
dimensional sphere
Let : ${\beta: S^n \rightarrow S^n}$ be one of the known examples
of minimal dynamical systems of n dimensional spheres, n ${\geq}$
3 odd. For every such (${\beta; S^n}$), there is a Cantor minimal
system (X; ${\alpha}$) such that the product system (${X \times S^n;
\alpha \times \beta}$) is minimal and such that tracial state space
of ${C(S^n) \rtimes_ \beta \mathbb{Z}}$ is preserved in ${C(X \times
S^n) \rtimes_{\alpha \times \beta}\mathbb{Z}}$.
I show that ${C(X \times S^n) \rtimes_{\alpha\times\beta}\mathbb{Z}}$
is a tracially approximately interval (TAI) algebra and hence classifiable.
Moreover, with forthcoming work of Wilhelm Winter this implies that
${C(Y ) \rtimes_\beta\mathbb{Z}}$ is TAI after tensoring with the
universal UHF algebra, showing that such crossed products are classified
by their tracial state spaces, as conjectured by N. Christopher Phillips.
|
Xiang Tang
Washington University |
Equivariant quantization and K-theory
In the early 90s, Marc Rieffel proved that K-groups of ${C^*}$-algebras
are invariant under strict deformations. In this talk, we will explain
a generalization of this theorem to the equivariant setting. As an application,
this result allows us to compute K-groups of some noncommutative orbifold
algebras. (Joint work with Yijun Yao).
|
Andreas Thom
Universität Leipzig
|
Entropy, Determinants, and ${L^2}$-Torsion
This talk is about the entropy of group actions of amenable
groups. I will present recent progress on questions asked by Christopher
Deninger about the entropy of certain principal algebraic dynamical
systems. I will show that the entropy of an algebraic dynamical system
agrees with the ${L^2}$-torsion of the dual module over the integral
group ring of the group acting. As a by-product we prove vanishing of
the ${L^2}$-torsion of amenable groups, which was conjectured by Wolfgang
Luck. This is joint work with Hanfeng Li.
|
Alfons Van Daele
University of Leuven, Belgium
Lecture Slides
|
The Larson-Sweedler theorem and the operator algebra approach to
quantum groups
The Larson-Sweedler theorem says that a bialgebra is a Hopf
algebra if there exist a left and a right integral. More precisely,
let A be a unital algebra (say over the field of complex numbers) with
a coproduct ${\Delta : A \rightarrow A \bigotimes A}$ and a counit ${\varepsilon
: A \rightarrow \mathbb{C}}$. If there exist non-zero linear functionals
${\varphi}$ and ${\psi}$ on ${A}$ satisfying ${(\iota \bigotimes \varphi)
\Delta (a) = \varphi (a) 1}$ and ${(\psi \bigotimes \iota) \Delta (a)=
\psi(a)1}$ for all ${a \in A}$ (where ${\iota}$ is the identity map
on ${A}$), then there is an antipode on ${A}$ and (${A, \Delta}$) is
a Hopf algebra. Compare this result with the notion of a locally compact
quantum group (in the von Neumann algebra setting). Given is a pair
${(M,\Delta)}$ of a von Neumann algebra M and a coproduct ${\Delta:
M \rightarrow M \bigotimes M}$ (where now the von Neumann algebraic
tensor product is considered). If there exist a left and a right Haar
weight ${\varphi}$ and ${\psi}$ on M, then ${(M,\Delta)}$ is a locally
compact quantum group. The key result in the theory of locally compact
quantum groups is the construction of the antipode from these axioms.
Then the similarity between this and the Larson-Sweedler theorem for
Hopf algebras is clear. We will mainly talk about this connection. But
at the end of the talk, we will briefly indicate how the same link pops
up in the more recent work on quantum groupoids (joint work with B.-J.
Kahng).
|
Erik van Erp
University of Hawaii at Manoa |
Some fundamental problems in the index theory of non-elliptic Fredholm
operators.
In the investigation of index formulas for non-elliptic Fredholm
operators, interesting new phenomena appear that are not apparent in
elliptic theory. In testing the boundaries of known approaches to index
problems, fundamental problems arise when we try to extend the theory
to more general Fredholm operators. I want to discuss some "negative
results" that may be of philosophical interest, partly in the hope
that a clear exposition of some of these issues might elicit new ideas
from the audience.
|
Qingyun Wang Washington
University in St Louis, about to join University of Toronto |
Rokhlin properties and non-commutative dimension
Given a C*-dynamic system ${\alpha: G \rightarrow Aut(A)}$,
we could form the crossed product ${C*(G,A,\alpha)}$, which is again
a C*-algebra, in a way similar to semi-product of groups. ${A}$ naturally
embeds into ${C*(G,A,\alpha)}$, hence it's interesting to see what properties
of ${A}$ can be inherited by the crossed product. In this talk, I will
present several definitions of dimension for C*-algebras, which are
non-commutative versions of Lebesgue's covering dimension for topological
spaces. Then I'll show that when the action ${\alpha}$ is nice, namely
having the Rokhlin properties, the property on ${A}$ of having dimension
${<k}$ will be inherited by the crossed products.
|
Stanisław Woronowicz
University of Warsaw
|
Wave operators and quantum groups in the C*-setting
Wave operators appeared first in the quantum scattering theory.
From the mathematical point of view they belong to the perturbation
theory of self-adjoint operators. We shall show, that after a suitable
modification they are useful when we construct examples of locally compact
quantum groups. The set of presented examples will include the (unpublished
as of yet) quantum ax + b-group with Schmudgen commutation
relations.
|
Guoliang Yu
Texas A&M University
|
K-theory of C*- algebras associated to Hilbert manifolds and applications
I will introduce a ${C^*}$-algebra associated to Hilbert
manifolds and discuss its applications to the Novikov conjecture for
a certain diffeomorphism group. This is joint work with Jianchao Wu
and Erik Guentner.
|