NONCOMMUTATIVE GEOMETRY SEMINAR
Mathematical Institute of the Polish Academy of Sciences
Ul. Sniadeckich 8, room 408, Mondays, 10:15-12:00
2 October 2006
PRINCIPAL HOPF-ALGEBRA EXTENSIONS FROM THE YETTER-DRINFELD BRAIDING
A simple topological construction allows one to produce non-trivial
principal bundles for all non-contractible compact groups. (This includes
all non-trivial compact Lie groups.) For instance, this way one can obtain
the edge of the Moebius strip over the circle, the Hopf fibration, and the
instanton fibration. The aim of this talk is to show how to carry out this
construction for an arbitrary Hopf *-algebra H. A key step is to use an
appropriate braiding on the tensor square of H, so as to make the diagonal
coaction of H a *-algebra homomorphism. The main result is a general and
explicit formula for a strong connection. The existence of a strong
connection puts us into the framework of principal extensions and
K-theory, and its explicit form gives us concrete idempotents representing
associated finitely generated projective modules. (Based on a joint work
with L.Dabrowski and T.Hadfield.)
PIOTR M. HAJAC
(Instytut Matematyczny, Polska Akademia Nauk / Katedra Metod Matematycznych Fizyki, Uniwersytet Warszawski)
9 October 2006
TWISTED SPECTRAL TRIPLES AND COVARIANT DIFFERENTIAL CALCULI OVER
QUANTUM SU(2)
Twisted spectral triples
generalise the standard notion of spectral triples
by replacing commutators [D,a] by Da - s(a)D, where s is an automorphism
of the algebra under consideration.
The aim of this talk is to point out that this concept (introduced
by Connes and
Moscovici in math.OA/0609703) yields a Hilbert space representation of
precisely one of Heckenberger's 3-dimensional covariant differential calculi on
quantum SU(2).
ULRICH KRAEHMER
(Instytut Matematyczny, Polska Akademia Nauk)
16 October 2006
NONCOMMUTATIVE GEOMETRY THROUGH MONOIDAL CATEGORIES
After introducing a noncommutative counterpart of
commutative algebraic geometry based on monoidal categories of
quasi-coherent sheaves, we show that various constructions in
noncommutative geometry (e.g. Morita equivalences, Hopf-Galois
extensions) can be given geometric meaning extending their
geometric interpretations in the commutative case. On the other
hand, we show that some constructions in commutative geometry
(e.g. faithfully flat descent theory, principal fibrations,
equivariant and infinitesimal geometry) can be interpreted as
noncommutative geometric constructions applied to commutative
objects. In all these considerations we lay stress on the role of
the monoidal structure, and the difference between this approach
and alternative approaches using (in general non-monoidal) abelian
categories as models for categories of quasicoherent sheaves on
noncommutative schemes.
TOMASZ MASZCZYK
(Instytut Matematyki UW / Instytut Matematyczny PAN)
23 October 2006
BEYOND HOPF ALGEBRAS
In the theory of Hopf algebras there is a structure theorem
which is very useful. It says that, in characteristic zero, a
connected cocommutative Hopf algebra is cofree as a coalgebra and is,
as an algebra, isomorphic to the universal enveloping algebra of a Lie
algebra. This structure theorem is essentially equivalent to the union
of the Poincare-Birkhoff-Witt theorem with the Cartier-Milnor-Moore
theorem. It involves three types of algebras, that is three operads:
Com for the coalgebra structure, As for the algebra structure, and Lie
for the structure of the primitive part. The purpose of this
talk is to show that there are numerous other examples of this form,
many of them already in the literature. We give elementary conditions
on a triple of operads (C, A, P), so that there is an analogous structure theorem. The
paradigm is (Com, As, Lie). (See
Generalized bialgebras and triples of operads
for details.)
JEAN-LOUIS LODAY (CNRS, Strasbourg, France)
30 October 2006
BIVARIANT HOPF-CYCLIC COHOMOLOGY
We will define a bivariant version of Hopf-cyclic cohomology.
We shall show that, when specialized to the ground field in either
variables, it will give the ordinary Hopf-cyclic cohomology
and dual Hopf-cyclic cohomology of module (co)algebras, respectively.
(Joint work with Masoud Khalkhali.)
ATABEY KAYGUN (University of Western Ontario, London, Canada)
6 November 2006
DIRAC OPERATORS ON ALL PODLES QUANTUM SPHERES
A construction of equivariant spectral triples for all Podles quantum
spheres is given. In particular cases, these spectral triples are regular,
even and of metric dimension 2. The conditions on an equivariant real
structure (commutant property and the first order condition) can be
satisfied up to infinitesimals of arbitrary order.
ELMAR WAGNER (University of Trieste, Italy)
13 November 2006
MORITA INVARIANCE OF HOPF-CYCLIC (CO)HOMOLOGY
We will prove the Morita invariance of Hopf-cyclic (co)homology
(with general coefficients)
of module (co)algebras. Herein we understand the Morita equivalance as the equivalence of certain categories of (co)representations.
(Joint work with Masoud Khalkhali.)
ATABEY KAYGUN (University of Western Ontario, London, Canada)
20 November 2006
X-COMPLEXES AND HOPF-CYCLIC (CO)HOMOLOGY
The notion of an X-complex was introduced by J.Cuntz and D.Quillen in a series of papers in the mid-90s. It proved to be a quite powerful instrument for treating cyclic (co)homology of algebras. In particular, it enables one to prove the excision in periodic cyclic cohomology. In this talk, I will explain their constructions and show how they should be modified if one wants to deal with Hopf-cyclic (co)homology with coefficients.
GEORGY SHARYGIN
(ITEP, Moscow, Russia)
27 November 2006
MEGATRACE
All known reasonable constructions of exotic operator traces
are specializations of one single construction: the `megatrace'.
MARIUSZ WODZICKI
(University of California at Berkeley, USA)
4 December 2006
K-THEORETIC CONSTRUCTION OF NONCOMMUTATIVE INSTANTONS OF ARBITRARY
CHARGES
We study noncommutative four-spheres constructed via gluings
(fiber products of algebras) of
noncommutative four-balls over their boundaries.
Using Milnor's map from the K_1 of the three-sphere algebra to the
K_0 of the four-sphere algebra, we obtain
a family of finitely generated projective modules indexed by
integers (the winding number). By the associativity of the Kasparov
product underlying the boundary maps in the Mayer-Vietoris six-term
exact sequence of KK-groups, the
index of these projective modules can be computed via the
index pairing of the defining unitaries over the three-sphere algebra.
As an example we consider an explicit gluing over quantum
SU(2). This corresponds
to the instanton construction of Pflaum.
We obtain explicit 4-by-4 idempotents
representing all instanton bundles. Moreover, we
prove that the index pairing of an instanton bundle with an appropriate Fredholm module (the charge of an instanton) always coincides with the
winding number. (Joint work with L.Dabrowski, P.M.Hajac, R.Matthes.)
TOM HADFIELD (Katedra Metod Matematycznych Fizyki, Uniwersytet Warszawski)
11 December 2006
CUP PRODUCTS IN HOPF-CYCLIC COHOMOLOGY
In this talk, we will define cup products in Hopf-cyclic cohomology by using Yoneda composition and bivariant Hopf-cyclic cohomology. We will also show that Connes-Moscovici characteristic map in Hopf-cyclic cohomology fits into this framework.
ATABEY KAYGUN (University of Western Ontario, London, Canada)
8 January 2007
EULERIAN IDEMPOTENT, KASHIWARA-VERGNE CONJECTURE AND CYCLIC HOMOLOGY
By using the interplay of the Eulerian idempotent and the Dynkin idempotent, we construct explicitly a particular symmetric solution (F,G) of the first equation of the Kashiwara-Vergne conjecture:
x+y-log(exp(y)exp(x))=(1-exp(-ad x))F(x,y)+(exp(ad y)-1)G(x,y).
Then, we explicit all the solutions of the equation in the completion of the free Lie algebra generated by two indeterminates x and y thanks to the kernel of the Dynkin idempotent. In the last part, we show how to use
the Eulerian idempotent to split cyclic homology.
EMILY BURGUNDER
(Montpellier, France)
9 January 2007 (Joint Noncommutative Geometry and Algebraic Topology Seminar. Exceptional place and time: Instytut Matematyki UW, ul. Banacha 2, room 5810, 12:00 Tuesday.)
THE MULTIFACETTES OF THE STASHEFF POLYTOPE
The Stasheff complex is a polytope whose vertices are in
bijection with the planar binary trees (one polytope for each n).
It plays a role in many problems in algebraic topology (loop spaces,
compactification). Recently it appeared also in algebraic combinatorics
and in noncommutative geometry. In this lecture I will present a simple
construction of these polytopes and show that the minimal triangulation is
related to the ``parking functions".
JEAN-LOUIS LODAY (CNRS, Strasbourg, France)
15 January 2007
PIECEWISE TRIVIAL PRINCIPAL EXTENSIONS OF NONCOMMUTATIVE ALGEBRAS
To adapt the standard notion of local triviality of principal
bundles to fibre products of C*-algebras,
we introduce the concept of piecewise
triviality. Using Paul Baum's example
called the bubble space, we explain the key difference between the
two definitions. Then we define and exemplify
piecewise triviality for principal extensions of arbitrary
unital algebras.
This brings us to the main part of the talk: proving that every
piecewise trivial extension is principal (locally trivial or piecewise
trivial compact G-spaces are principal) and determining the piecewise
structure of principal
extensions of fibre-product algebras.
(Based on a joint work with P.M.Hajac, U.Kraehmer and R.Matthes.)
BARTOSZ ZIELINSKI (IMPAN / Uniwersytet Lodzki)
22 January 2007 (Please note the room change: 403.)
NON-COMMUTATIVE DUALITIES
I will discuss some basic notions of spaces and sheaves in the framework
of derived algebraic geometry,
where one replaces usual associative algebras by differential graded
algebras and, more
generally, by triangulated differential graded categories.
The ideal object is a smooth non-commutative space of finite type, for
which examples are
acyclic quivers with relations, smooth (commutative) algebraic varieties,
free algebras,
finite cell complexes, quantum projective spaces and algebraic quantum
groups.
Non-commutative definitions come in dual pairs:
perfect complex <-----> finite-dimensional representation
smoothness <-----> compactness
compactification <-----> resolution of singularities
Also, I will describe Serre dualities, Calabi-Yau properties,
and a remarkable analogy between von Neumann algebras in functional
analysis,
and Koszul duality and formal completions in the
derived setting.
MAXIM KONTSEVICH (IHES, Bures-sur-Yvette, France)
19 February 2007
TOWARDS AN ANALOGUE OF THE BAUM-CONNES CONJECTURE FOR DISCRETE
QUANTUM GROUPS
We shall first review the approach to the Baum-Connes conjecture
developped by Meyer and Nest using the language of triangulated categories
and derived functors. Then we will describe some constructions needed to
extend this machinery to the setting of quantum groups. As
an illustration, we will
explain how to formulate and prove the conjecture
for the dual of the quantum SU(2) group.
CHRISTIAN VOIGT (Universitaet Muenster, Germany)
26 February 2007
QUANTUM GROUPS AND TWISTED SPECTRAL TRIPLES
In a recent paper, Connes and Moscovici explain how a twist
in the original definition of a spectral triple makes it
possible to deal with algebras with no (or few) traces.
We review the basic properties of twisted spectral triples,
their application to the construction of differential calculi
and local index formulas, and compare the situation with the
untwisted case.
Then, we discuss how these notions fit into the framework
of quantum homogeneous spaces, and illustrate what can be
done in the example of the Landi-Pagani-Reina quantum symplectic
4-sphere.
FRANCESCO D'ANDREA
(SISSA, Trieste, Italy)
5 March 2007
POINCARE DUALITY ON NONCOMMUTATIVE MANIFOLDS
In classical differential geometry, one of the main properties of a
compact diffierentiable manifold M of dimension n is the Poincare
duality, which establishes an isomorphism between cohomology in degree k
and homology in degree n-k, or equivalently, it provides a non degenerate
complex valued pairing between cohomology groups in degree k and n-k. An
analogue of this property, expressed in terms of Poincare duality in
Kasparov's KK-theory, has found a place in Connes' axiomatic description
of differentiable manifolds in noncommutative geometry. In this talk we
shall give an introduction to the notion of Poincare duality in bivariant
K-theory and provide applications of this formalism in the D-brane theory.
We propose a general formula for D-brane charge. We shall also discuss the
Gysin map in this context and the Grothendieck-Riemann-Roch theorem.
JACEK BRODZKI (University of Southampton, G. Britain)
12 March 2007
HOCHSCHILD AND CYCLIC (CO)HOMOLOGY OF HOPF-GALOIS EXTENSIONS
Hochschild and cyclic cohomology are important invariants of
algebras. In general, their computation is a very difficult task.
In the case of Hopf-Galois extensions there are results that help
to overcome this difficulty. The aim of my talk is to survey some
of them. First, for a Hopf-Galois extension of B to A, there are several
spectral sequences converging to the Hochschild (co)homology of A.
I shall focus on the construction of a variant of
Hochschild-Lyndon-Serre spectral sequence. Secondly, in certain
cases (e.g. B is separable), one can use relative version of the
invariants that we are interested in, which, in principle, are
easier to compute. In the main part of my talk I will discuss the
relationship between relative Hochschild and cyclic (co)homology
and Hopf-cyclic (co)homology with coefficients.
DRAGOS STEFAN (University of Bucharest, Romania)
19 March 2007
EQUIVARIANT CHERN CHARACTER FOR TOTALLY DISCONNECTED GROUPS
We explain the construction of a bivariant Chern character
from the equivariant KK-theory for a totally disconnected group
to bivariant equivariant cohomology in the sense of Baum and Schneider.
As a consequence, we obtain that the complexified left hand side of the
Baum-Connes assembly map is given by Bredon homology.
In the case of discrete groups, it yields the inverse to the Chern character for equivariant K-homology obtained by Lueck.
A main ingredient in our approach is equivariant cyclic homology.
CHRISTIAN VOIGT (Universitaet Muenster, Germany)
26 March 2007
DUALITY IN EQUIVARIANT CYCLIC HOMOLOGY AND HOPF-CYCLIC COHOMOLOGY
In this talk, we explain how equivariant cyclic homology can be
generalized to the setting of quantum groups. A basic feature of the
resulting theory is an analogue of the Baaj-Skandalis duality
isomorphism in KK-theory. To formulate and prove this duality,
modular pairs in the sense of Connes and Moscovici play a crucial role.
At the same time, this provides a link to Hopf-cyclic cohomology.
Time permitting, we will indicate further possible connections.
CHRISTIAN VOIGT (Universitaet Muenster, Germany)
2 April 2007
SPECTRAL GEOMETRY OF QUANTUM LENS SPACES
I will focus on the case study of
quantum lens spaces obtained from both the quantum SU(2) group
and the Matsumoto twisted (isospectral) deformation of the 3-sphere.
These noncommutative deformations will be compared with the classical
spin geometry of the 3-sphere. Time
permitting, I shall discuss other noncommutaive quotient spaces.
ANDRZEJ SITARZ
(Uniwersytet Jagiellonski, Poland)
16 April 2007
NONCOMMUTATIVE SCHEMES AND THEIR GEOMETRIC REALIZATION
I will introduce the notions and basic properties of
noncommutative schemes and more general locally affine noncommutative spaces,
together with some motivating examples of different
nature which triggered these notions and still continue
to stimulate developments of noncommutative algebraic geometry.
I will discuss underlying topological spaces and related
geometric realizations of noncommutative schemes. These geometric
realizations and surrounding them facts of noncommutative local
algebra give new insight (and applications) to
representation theory and to local study of morphisms of
noncommutative schemes. They also produce natural tools for the study
of K-groups of noncommutative schemes and more general noncommutative spaces.
A commutative consequence of the geometric realizations
is the reconstruction of commutative schemes from their
categories of quasi-coherent sheaves.
If time permits, I will shortly describe the triangulated
version of this picture and/or mention some of its more
exotic (non-additive) variants.
ALEXANDER ROSENBERG
(IHES, France / Kansas State University, USA)
23 April 2007 (room 403)
RIGIDITY PHENOMENA FOR VON NEUMANN ALGEBRAS AND GROUP ACTIONS
Group actions on probability spaces give rise to von Neumann algebras.
Recently, Sorin Popa has introduced very powerful techniques allowing in
certain cases to recover the group and the action from the associated von
Neumann algebra. I discuss several applications of these techniques:
Popa's orbit equivalence superrigidity results, joint work with Popa on
the outer automorphism groups of type II_1 factors, and my recent work on
the existence of type II_1 factors without non-trivial finite index
subfactors.
STEFAAN VAES
(Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium)
7 May 2007
THE BAUM-CONNES CONJECTURE FOR QUANTUM GROUPS
I will present an approach to the Baum-Connes conjecture that involves
localisation of categories. After briefly reviewing the classical case of
groups, where we get the known Baum-Connes assembly map, I will discuss
the case of coactions of compact groups and discuss the ingredients that
seem relevant to construct an analogue of the Baum-Connes assembly map for
general discrete quantum groups.
RALF MEYER
(Universitaet Goettingen, Germany)
14 May 2007
UNBOUNDED OPERATORS AFFILIATED TO C*-ALGEBRAS
In many situations, we deal with unbounded operators that are in a sense
related to operator algebras.
This is the case in quantum mechanics, where (unbounded) Hamiltonian is
related to the algebra of
observables, and in the theory of
locally compact (non-compact) quantum groups, where
matrix elements of finite-dimensional
representations are related to the C*-algebra of "functions on the
group". Similarly, infinitesimal generators
of a Lie group are related to the convolution C*-algebra of the group.
In all
these cases the unboundedness is the only feature
that prevents us from including the operators in the C*-algebra.
Instead, we
say that the operators are affiliated with
the algebra. The aim of the talk is to define the affiliation relation in
the C*-algebraic context and show a number
of applications and properties. (Based on the following articles:
S.Baaj and P.Julg,
S.L.Woronowicz,
K.Napiorkowski and S.L.Woronowicz,
S.L.Woronowicz.)
STANISLAW L. WORONOWICZ
(Katedra Metod Matematycznych Fizyki, Uniwersytet Warszawski)
21 May 2007
GEOMETRIC STRUCTURE IN THE REPRESENTATION THEORY OF P-ADIC GROUPS
Let G be a reductive p-adic group. Examples are GL(n, F), SL(n, F), etc,
where n can be any positive integer and F can be any finite
extension of the p-adic numbers Q_p. The smooth dual of G is the set of
equivalence classes of irreducible smooth representations
of G. The relevant algebra for the smooth dual is the Hecke algebra of G.
This is the convolution algebra of all locally constant compactly
supported complex-valued functions f : G --->C.
The Hecke algebra of G is a dense, but not
holomorphically closed, sub-algebra of the reduced C*-algebra of G. The
smooth dual contains the reduced unitary dual. This talk states
a conjecture (due to A.-M.Aubert, P.Baum, and R.Plymen) which asserts that
the smooth dual is a countable disjoint union of complex affine
algebraic varieties. These varieties are explicitly identified. The
conjecture is based on results of J.Bernstein, and if correct continues
Bernstein's
work. The inter-action with the reduced unitary dual (i.e. the support of
the Plancherel measure) will be explained.
PAUL F. BAUM
(Pennsylvania State University, State College, USA)
28 May 2007
CYCLIC HOMOLOGY WITH COEFFICIENTS THROUGH CORINGS
A new approach to the coefficients of cyclic homology will be
presented using corings. In the case of the Sweedler coring, we obtain
cyclic homology with coefficients of a ring extension with no
assumption on commutativity of the base ring. The latter assumption was
essential in the approach of Kaledin using the language of cocartesian
objects in symmetric monoidal categories. It will be shown
that in our formalism this restrictive context can be avoided, and
cyclic homology with coefficients
can be constructed in much greater generality.
TOMASZ MASZCZYK
(Instytut Matematyki UW / Instytut Matematyczny PAN)
29 May 2007
(Joint Noncommutative Geometry and Algebraic Topology Seminar.
Exceptional place and time: Instytut Matematyki UW, ul. Banacha 2, room
5810, 12:00 Tuesday.)
NONCOMMUTATIVE JOIN CONSTRUCTION
The aim of this
talk is to show how to carry out the join construction of
compact quantum groups avoiding braiding and replacing the unit
interval by an arbitrary unital C*-algebra (noncommutative compact
Hausdorff space). This is
done in terms of equivariantly projective Hopf-Galois extensions
of C*-algebras. The completion
of the extended algebra is a natural candidate for a non-crossed
product example of a principal extension of C*-algebras in the sense
of Ellwood (non-trivial noncommutative principal bundle).
The main point is
a general and explicit formula for a strong connection, which puts us
directly into the framework of the index pairing between K-theory and
K-homology. (Based on a joint work with L.Dabrowski and T.Hadfield.)
PIOTR M. HAJAC
(Instytut Matematyczny, Polska Akademia Nauk / Katedra Metod Matematycznych Fizyki, Uniwersytet Warszawski)
4 June 2007
FIBRE-PRODUCT APPROACH TO THE INDEX PAIRING FOR HOPF FIBRATIONS
On the C*-algebraic level, the generic Podles quantum spheres are obtained
by gluing two quantum discs along their boundaries (fibre product of
Toeplitz algebras over the algebra of continuous functions on the circle).
Applying the functional calculus, we will show that the noncommutative
line bundles associated to the Hopf fibration of quantum SU(2) over a
generic Podles sphere can be described as fibre products of Toeplitz
algebras now viewed as free modules (trivial line bundles). Then, using
explicit projections from the Bass construction, we easily determine
the Chern numbers from the index pairing. Thus we obtain an alternative to
the earlier index computation that relied on the noncommutative index
formula. Finally, we argue that the entire construction still makes sense
if one quantum disc is "shrinked to a point". On the technical level, this
means that one Teoplitz algebra is replaced by the field of complex
numbers and one of the mappings in the pull-back diagram is not
surjective. This construction yields a description of the Hopf fibration
of quantum SU(2) over the standard Podles sphere.
ELMAR WAGNER
(Katedra Metod Matematycznych Fizyki, Uniwersytet Warszawski)