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THE
FIELDS INSTITUTE FOR RESEARCH IN MATHEMATICAL SCIENCES
October
11-12, 2014
The 12th East Coast Operator Algebras Symposium
Fields
Institute , 222 College St,Toronto
Organizers:
Ilijas Farah, York University
George A. Elliott, University of Toronto
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Speaker Abstracts
Saturday October 11th, 2014 |
Time |
Speaker, Title and Abstract |
9:00-9:45am |
Nate Brown (Penn State University)
On the Toms-Winter Conjecture
I'll discuss the history and current state of this conjecture, emphasizing
analogies with Connes's work on injective factors. There have been
tremendous advances in the last year, this conjecture could fall soon.
I'll discuss what remains to be done.
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10:15-11:00am |
Marius Dadarlat (Purdue University)
K-theoretic quasidiagonality and almost flat bundles
We will discuss connections between quasidiagonality of group C*-algebras
C*(G) and almost flat bundles on the classifying space of G.
The talk is based on the paper "Group quasi-representations and
almost flat bundles" and on recent joint work with Jose Carrion.
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11:15-11:45am |
Caleb Eckhardt (Miami University)
Nuclear dimension of nilpotent group C*-algebras
We discuss recent work with Paul McKenney showing that C*(G) has
finite nuclear dimension when G is a finitely generated nilpotent
group. We'll explain what all the terms of the last sentence mean
as well as implications of the result for Elliott's classification
program and representation theory of nilpotent groups.
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12:00-12:30pm |
Isaac Goldbring (University of Illinois at Chicago)
Existentially closed C* algebras and operator systems
A C* algebra B is said to be existentially closed if, roughly speaking,
every set of equations involving the norms of noncommutative *polynomial
with parameters in B that has a solution in B(H) already has approximate
solutions in B. There is an analogous notion of existentially closed
operator system, where now one looks at equations involving matrix
norms of linear *polynomials. In this talk, we investigate the relationship
between existential closedness and other well known properties in
operator algebras, e.g. nuclearity, WEP, and LLP. This is joint work
with Thomas Sinclair.
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2:00-2:45pm |
Hanfeng Li (University ofBuffalo)
Ergodicity of principal algebraic actions
For a countable group G and an element f of the integral group ring
ZG of G, one may consider the G-action on the Pontryagin dual of ZG/ZGf.
I will discuss when such a principal algebraic action is ergodic with
respect to the Haar measure. This is joint work with Jesse Peterson
and Klaus Schmidt.
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3:15-4:00pm |
Leonel Robert (University of Louisiana, Lafayette)
Commutators and regularity of C*-algebras
An element of a C*-algebra belongs to the kernel of all bounded traces
if and only if it is a limit of sums of commutators (a consequence
of Hahn-Banach's theorem). For many C*-algebras, more can be said:
the number of terms in the sums of commutators can be kept fixed;
even better: no approximation is needed. This phenomenon has been
explored by several authors (Fack, Thomsen, Pop, Marcoux, Ng, et.
al.). On the other hand, examples exist of simple nuclear C*-algebras
where no approximation by a fixed number of commutators is possible.
In fact, regularity properties such as nuclear dimension, Z-stability,
and pureness, play a significat role in this question. I will discuss
these and other results, some obtained in recent work with Ping Wong
Ng.
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4:15-5:00pm |
Frederic Latremoliere (University of Denver)
The Gromov-Hausdorff propinquity
We survey the notion of a quantum metric space, including the locally
compact notion we recently introduced, and then a few particular generalizations
of the Gromov-Hausdorff distance to the noncommutative context, which
we introduced under the name of the Gromov-Hausdorff propinquity.
These new metrics on the class of quantum compact metric spaces are
devised to provide a natural framework for the study of noncommutative
metric geometry: they are defined within the category of C*-algebras,
make *-isomorphisms a necessary condition for distance zero, and some
of them are complete. These metrics were in particular devised to
address some issues raised by the recent research in noncommutative
metric geometry regarding the continuity of certain C*-algebraic structures.
We also will address how these new forms of convergences for quantum
compact metric spaces can be adapted to our notion of quantum locally
compact metric spaces.
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5:15-5:45pm |
Farzad Fathizadeh (University of Western Ontario)
Scalar curvature and Einstein-Hilbert action for noncommutative tori
Noncommutative geometry has many overlaps with operator algebras
and spectral geometry. In this talk, I will present a review of some
recent developments on local differential geometry of noncommutative
tori equipped with curved metrics, which were stimulated by a seminal
paper of A. Connes and P. Tretkoff on the Gauss-Bonnet theorem for
the noncommutative two-torus. In joint works with M. Khalkhali, we
extend this result to general translation-invariant conformal structures
on the noncommutative two-torus and compute the scalar curvature,
where our final formula matches with the independent computation by
A. Connes and H. Moscovici. For the noncommutative four-torus, after
computing the scalar curvature, we consider the analog of the Einstein-Hilbert
action and show that flat metrics are extremums of this action within
a conformal class. We also prove the analog of Weyl's law and Connes'
trace theorem for these spaces.
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Sunday October
12th, 2014 |
Time |
Speaker, Title and Abstract |
9:00-9:45am |
Serban Belinschi (Queen's University)
The linearization trick
The idea of what we call here "the linearization trick"
is the following: given a non-linear object (polynomial or rational
function - not necessarily commutative) with "simple" (for
ex. complex) coefficients, find a linear polynomial with matrix coefficients
such that the relevant properties of the initial non-linear object
can be easily deduced from properties of the linear polynomial. This
approach is by no means new, and it can be found under one guise or
another in several subfields of mathematics. In our talk, we will
be concerned primarily with versions of the linearization trick used
in random matrix theory and free probability.
We will start our talk by presenting a very brief and selective history
of applications of the linearization trick in free probability. We
will then show how to use linearization for the study of the distributions
of symmetric polynomials in two free selfadjoint random variables.
We will conclude by presenting a more precise (although not yet fully
satisfactory) characterization of atomic parts of distributions of
such polynomials in terms of the atoms of the two variables involved.
Most of this is based on both completed and ongoing work with Mai,
Sniady and Speicher.
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10:15-11:00am |
Dima Shlyakhtenko (University of California, Los Angeles)
Polynomials in Free Variables
We discuss the following question. Let X,Y be two non-commutative
random variables. Assume some amount of freeness between X and Y.
For p a non-commutative self-adjoint polynomial, what can be said
about the law of p(X,Y)? We discuss our previous joint work with P.
Skoufranis which proceeds under the assumption that X and Y are free
and mirrors the proof of the Atiyah Conjecture for free groups, a
result of Mai, Speicher and Weber which requires finiteness of free
Fisher information and finally our improvement of their result which
assumes vanishing of a certain homology group.
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11:15-11:45am |
José R. Carrión (Penn State University)
Local embeddability of groups and quasidiagonality
We discuss recent developments concerning the quasidiagonality of
group $C^*$-algebras and in particular how it relates to the group-theoretic
notion of local embeddability.
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12:00-12:30pm |
Zhengwei Liu (Vanderbilt University)
Noncommutative uncertainty principles
In this talk, I will introduce the uncertainty principle for subfactors
and discuss some recent work joint with Chunlan Jiang and Jinsong
Wu. http://arxiv.org/abs/1408.1165
The uncertainty principle is a fundamental phenomenon related to
a pair of objects dual to each other, such as the Heisenberg uncertainty
principle for position and momentum of a particle. Subfactor theory
naturally provides such a dual pair of von-Neumann algebras, such
as the Pontryagin duality for locally compact abelian groups. Subfactor
planar algebras were introduced by Jones as a Categorification of
finite index subfactors. New concepts and tools were discovered, in
particular a categorification of the Fourier transform. The classical
uncertainty principles deal with functions on abelian groups. We discuss
the uncertainty principles for finite index subfactors which include
the cases for finite groups and finite dimensional Kac algebras. We
prove the Hausdorff-Young inequality, Young's inequality, the Hirschman-Beckner
uncertainty principle, the Donoho-Stark uncertainty principle. We
characterize the minimizers of the uncertainty principles. We also
prove that the minimizer is uniquely determined by the supports of
itself and its Fourier transform. The proofs take the advantage of
the analytic and the categorial perspectives of subfactor planar algebras.
Our method to prove the uncertainty principles also works for more
general cases, such as Popa's ?-lattices, modular tensor categories
etc. Once we have a connection in the sense of Ocneanu, the uncertainty
principles hold.
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2:00-2:30pm |
Martino Lupini (York University)
The classification problem for separable operator systems
I will present an overview on the complexity of classifying separable
operator systems up to complete order isomorphism. While it is hopeless
to classify arbitrary separable operator systems, finitely generated
operator systems admit a satisfactory smooth classification. For example
operator systems generated by a single unitary operator are classified
by the spectrum of such operator up to a rigid motion of the circle.
This is joint work with Martin Argerami, Samuel Coskey, Matthew Kennedy,
Mehrdad Kalantar, and Marcin Sabok.
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Contributed Talks |
2:40-3:00pm |
Andre Kornell (UC Berkeley)
V*-algebras
Working in a model of set theory in which every set of real numbers
is Lebesgue measurable, I will define the category of V*-algebras.
Every separable unital C*-algebra has an enveloping V*-algebra, which
may be identified with the space of strongly affine functions on the
state space. If the C*-algebra is type I, then its enveloping V*-algebra
is a direct sum of type I factors, with one summand for each irreducible
representation.
Maria Grazia Viola (Lakehead University)
Coauthors: N. Cristopher Phillips
Classification of L^p AF algebras
We first define the notion of spatial L^p algebras and scaled ordered
K_0 group for L^p AF algebras. Our main result is a complete classification
of spatial L^p AF algebras. We show that two spatial L^p AF algebras
are isomorphic if and only if their scaled ordered K_0 groups are
isomorphic. Moreover, we show that any countable Riesz group can be
realized as the scaled ordered K_0 group of a spatial L^p AF algebras.
Therefore, the classification given by G. Elliott for AF C*-algebras
also holds for spatial L^p AF algebras. Lastly, we discuss incompressibility
and p-incompressibility for spatial L^p AF algebras.
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3:10-3:30pm |
Scott Atkinson (University of Virginia)
Convex Sets Associated to C*-Algebras
Given a separable C*-algebra A, we can associate to A an invariant
given by a family of convex separable metric spaces. This family is
closely related to the trace space of A, and we expect this invariant
to be finer than the trace space invariant. This is an ongoing project
based off of a 2011 paper by Nate Brown.
Yanli Song (University of Toronto)
Localization of K-Homology Fundamental Class
Let M be a Riemannian manifold with a compact Lie group action. Using
the de Rham differential operator, Kasparov defined a distinguished
K-homology fundamental class. We extend the fundamental class to the
K-homology of crossed product of C*-algebras. Moreover, by introducing
a perturbed fundamental class, we obtain a localization formula. This
provides a K-homological approach to transversally elliptic operators.
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