algebraic quantum field theory (perturbative, on curved spacetimes, homotopical)
quantum mechanical system, quantum probability
interacting field quantization
In noncommutative topology the standard notion of homomorphism of C*-algebras is too restrictive for some applications, related to the fact that some noncommutative -algebras correspond to “locally badly behaved” noncommutative topological spaces. The notion of asymptotic -homomorphism is more flexible than that of plain -homomorphisms and designed to correct this problem. Homotopy classes of asymptotic -homomorphisms are the hom-sets in a category called E-theory. See there for more details.
For two C*-algebras, an asymptotic homomorphism between them is a -parameterized collection of continuous functions , such that
for each , the function is a continuous function;
in the limit , becomes a star-algebra homomorphism.
As for ordinary -algebra homomorphisms one puts:
For to asymptotic -homomorphisms, def. , a (right) homotopy between them is an asyptotic homomorphism which restricts to at 0 and to at , hence such that it fits into a commuting diagram of the form
Homotopy of asymptotic -homomorphisms is clearly an equivalence relation. Write for the set of homotopy-equivalence classes of asymptotic homomorphisms .
For C*Alg, the set is naturally an abelian group under the composition operation which sends the homotopy classes presented by to the homotopy class of
The -wise composition of two asymptotic -homomorphisms is not in general itself an asymptotic -homomorphims. However, every asympotic homomorphism is homotopic to one which is an equicontinuous function, and -wise composition of equicontinuous asymptotic -homomorphisms is again an asymptotic homomorphism.
Two asymptotic -homomorphisms which differe just by a reparameterization of while having the same limit can be related by a homotopy, def. .
(self-adjointification homotopy)
For an asymptotic -homomorphism, there is a homotopy to the asymptotic morphism
The notion was introduced in
A review is for instance around p. 23 of
Last revised on April 10, 2013 at 20:33:13. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.