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C*‐Algebras with Dense Nilpotent Subalgebras
Author(s) -
Read C. J.
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
bulletin of the london mathematical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.396
H-Index - 48
eISSN - 1469-2120
pISSN - 0024-6093
DOI - 10.1112/s0024609302001637
Subject(s) - mathematics , subalgebra , separable space , nilpotent , homomorphism , algebra over a field , pure mathematics , space (punctuation) , cartan subalgebra , discrete mathematics , affine lie algebra , mathematical analysis , current algebra , linguistics , philosophy
In a beautiful result, Herrero (D. A. Herrero, ‘Normal limits of nilpotent operators’, Indiana Univ. Math. J. 23 (1973/74) 1097–1108) showed that a normal operator on l 2 lies in the closure of the set of nilpotent operators if and only if its spectrum is connected and contains zero. In the quest for an automatic continuity result for algebra homomorphisms between C* ‐algebras, Dales showed that, if a discontinuous algebra homomorphism θ: A → u exists between C*‐algebras A and u , and if θ( A ) is dense in u , then there is a C*‐algebra u 2 with a dense subalgebra N ⊂ u 2 such that every x ε N is quasinilpotent (see p. 685 of H. G. Dales, Banach algebras and automatic continuity , London Mathematical Society Monographs 24, Oxford University Press, 2001). (A discontinuous homomorphism θ 2 : A 2 → u 2 can be defined with the same basic properties as θ, but the revised target space u 2 has a dense subalgebra consisting of quasinilpotent elements.) As remarked by Dales, no such C*‐algebra was then known; but here we present one. Indeed, using the full power of Herrero's result, one may arrange that every x ε N is nilpotent. The C*‐algebra is constructed in a ‘neat’ way; it is most naturally constructed as a non‐separable, concrete C*‐algebra of operators on a separable Hilbert space K but one can arrange that the algebra u itself be separable if desired. 2000 Mathematics Subject Classification 47C15, 46H40 (primary), 47A10, 46L06, 46L05, 46H35 (secondary).

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