In mathematics, a hereditary C*-subalgebra of a C*-algebra is a particular type of C*-subalgebra whose structure is closely related to that of the larger C*-algebra. A C*-subalgebra B of A is a hereditary C*-subalgebra if for all aA and bB such that 0 ≤ ab, we have aB.[1]

Properties

  • A hereditary C*-subalgebra of an approximately finite-dimensional C*-algebra is also AF. This is not true for subalgebras that are not hereditary. For instance, every abelian C*-algebra can be embedded into an AF C*-algebra.
  • A C*-subalgebra is called full if it is not contained in any proper (two-sided) closed ideal. Two C*-algebras A and B are called stably isomorphic if A  K  B  K, where K is the C*-algebra of compact operators on a separable infinite-dimensional Hilbert space. C*-algebras are stably isomorphic to their full hereditary C*-subalgebras.[2] Hence, two C*-algebras are stably isomorphic if they contain stably isomorphic full hereditary C*-subalgebras.
  • Also hereditary C*-subalgebras are those C*-subalgebras in which the restriction of any irreducible representation is also irreducible.

Correspondence with closed left ideals

There is a bijective correspondence between closed left ideals and hereditary C*-subalgebras of A. If LA is a closed left ideal, let L* denote the image of L under the *-operation. The set L* is a right ideal and L* ∩ L is a C*-subalgebra. In fact, L* ∩ L is hereditary and the map L L* ∩ L is a bijection. It follows from this correspondence that every closed ideal is a hereditary C*-subalgebra. Another corollary is that a hereditary C*-subalgebra of a simple C*-algebra is also simple.

Connections with positive elements

If p is a projection of A (or a projection of the multiplier algebra of A), then pAp is a hereditary C*-subalgebra known as a corner of A. More generally, given a positive a  A, the closure of the set aAa is the smallest hereditary C*-subalgebra containing a, denoted by Her(a). If A is separable, then every hereditary C*-subalgebra has this form.

These hereditary C*-subalgebras can bring some insight into the notion of Cuntz subequivalence. In particular, if a and b are positive elements of a C*-algebra A, then if b  Her(a). Hence, a ~ b if Her(a) = Her(b).

If A is unital and the positive element a is invertible, then Her(a) = A. This suggests the following notion for the non-unital case: aA is said to be strictly positive if Her(a) = A. For example, in the C*-algebra K(H) of compact operators acting on Hilbert space H, a compact operator is strictly positive if and only if its range is dense in H. A commutative C*-algebra contains a strictly positive element if and only if the spectrum of the algebra is σ-compact. More generally, a C*-algebra contains a strictly positive element if and only if the algebra has a sequential approximate identity.

References

  1. Blackadar, Bruce (2006). Operator Algebras: Theory of C*-Algebras and von Neumann Algebras. Springer. pp. 75–79. ISBN 978-3-540-28517-5.
  2. Brown, Lawrence G. (1977). "Stable Isomorphism of Hereditary Subalgebras of C*-algebras". Pacific Journal of Mathematics. 71 (2): 335–348. doi:10.2140/pjm.1977.71.335. Zbl 0362.46042.
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