Difference between revisions of "JB*-triple"
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+ | $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-triples were introduced by W. Kaup [[#References|[a8]]] in connection with the study of bounded symmetric domains in complex Banach spaces. A definition of $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-triples involving holomorphy is as follows: A $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-triple is a complex [[Banach space|Banach space]] $E$ such that the open unit ball $B$ of $E$ is homogeneous under its full group $G$ of biholomorphic automorphisms (and hence is symmetric, cf. [[Symmetric space|Symmetric space]]). The main result in [[#References|[a8]]] states that to every abstract bounded symmetric domain $D$ in a complex Banach space there exists a unique (up to linear isometry) $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-triple $E$ whose open unit ball is biholomorphically equivalent to $D$. The group $G$ is always a real Banach Lie group (cf. also [[Lie group, Banach|Lie group, Banach]]) acting in a natural way on various spaces of holomorphic functions as well as on various submanifolds of the unit sphere in $E$ (in case $E$ has finite dimension, $G$ is semi-simple and also has finite dimension — the induced [[Unitary representation|unitary representation]] on Bergman space, cf. also [[Bergman spaces|Bergman spaces]], is of special interest in [[Harmonic analysis|harmonic analysis]]). | ||
− | + | An equivalent, but more algebraic definition for $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-triples is as follows: The complex Banach space $E$ is a $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-triple if it carries a (necessarily unique) ternary product (called triple product) or [[trilinear mapping]] | |
− | + | \begin{equation*} E \times E \times E \rightarrow E , ( x , y , z ) \mapsto \{ x y z \} \end{equation*} | |
− | + | satisfying the following properties for all $a, b , x , y , z \in E$ and $a \square b ^ { * } : E \rightarrow E$ defined by $z \mapsto \{ a b z \}$: | |
− | + | i) $\{ x y z \}$ is symmetric complex bilinear in the outer variables $x$, $z$ and conjugate linear in $y$; | |
− | + | ii) $[ a \square b ^ { * } , x \square y ^ { * } ] = \{ a b x \} \square y ^ { * } - x \square \{ y a b \}^{*}$ (the Jordan triple identity); | |
− | The sesquilinear mapping | + | iii) $a \square a ^ { * }$, as a [[Linear operator|linear operator]] on $E$, is Hermitian and has spectrum $\geq 0$ (cf. also [[Hermitian operator|Hermitian operator]]; [[Spectrum of an operator|Spectrum of an operator]]); |
+ | |||
+ | iv) $\| a \square a ^ { * } \| = \| a \| ^ { 2 }$ (the $C ^ { * }$-condition). | ||
+ | |||
+ | The sesquilinear mapping $( a , b ) \mapsto a \square b ^ { * }$ may be considered as an operator-valued product on $E$. It satisfies $\| a \square b ^ { * } \| \leq \| a \| \cdot \| b \|$ (not an elementary fact!) and condition iv) is analogous to the characteristic property of $C ^ { * }$-algebras (cf. also [[C*-algebra|$C ^ { * }$-algebra]]). On the other hand, by iii), the above mapping may also be considered as a positive Hermitian operator-valued form on $E$, thus giving a natural orthogonality relation on $E$. | ||
Some examples are: | Some examples are: | ||
− | 1) Every | + | 1) Every $C ^ { * }$-algebra (more precisely, the underlying complex Banach space). The triple product is given by $\{ x y z \} = ( x y ^ { * } z + z y ^ { * } x ) / 2$. |
− | 2) Every closed (complex) subtriple of a | + | 2) Every closed (complex) subtriple of a $C ^ { * }$-algebra. These are also called $\operatorname{JC} ^ { * }$-triples. These triples were originally introduced and intensively studied by L.A. Harris [[#References|[a5]]] under the name $J ^ { * }$-algebra (cf. also [[Banach–Jordan algebra|Banach–Jordan algebra]]). |
− | 3) Every | + | 3) Every $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-algebra (i.e. Jordan $C ^ { * }$-algebra, [[#References|[a15]]]), with $\{ x y z \} = x \circ ( y ^ { * } \circ z ) + z \circ ( y ^ { * } \circ x ) - ( x \circ z ) \circ y ^ { * }$. In particular, the famous exceptional $27$-dimensional $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-algebra $\mathcal{H} _ { 3 } ( \mathbf{O} ^ { c } )$ (which is not a $\operatorname{JC} ^ { * }$-triple) of all Hermitian $( 3 \times 3 )$-matrices over the complex octonian algebra. |
− | 4) Every | + | 4) Every $\operatorname {JBW} ^ { * }$-triple, i.e. a $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-triple having a (necessarily unique) pre-dual. Among these are the $w ^ { * }$-closed subtriples of von Neumann algebras as well as the Cartan factors, which are the building blocks of the $\operatorname {JBW} ^ { * }$-triples of type I (in analogy to the von Neumann algebras of type I, cf. also [[Von Neumann algebra|von Neumann algebra]]). |
− | The class of all | + | The class of all $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-triples is invariant under taking arbitrary $l_ { \infty }$-sums, quotients by closed triple ideals, ultrapowers, biduals [[#References|[a1]]], as well as contractive projections [[#References|[a9]]]. Notice that the range of a contractive projection on a $C ^ { * }$-algebra in general does not have the structure of a $C ^ { * }$-algebra, but always is a $\operatorname{JC} ^ { * }$-triple. The Gel'fand–Naimark theorem of Y. Friedman and B. Russo [[#References|[a3]]] states that each $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-triple can be realized as a subtriple of an $l_ { \infty }$-sum $A \oplus B$ where $A$ is the $\operatorname {JBW} ^ { * }$-triple of all bounded linear operators on a suitable complex [[Hilbert space|Hilbert space]] and $B$ is the exceptional $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-algebra of all $\mathcal{H} _ { 3 } ( \mathbf{O} ^ { c } )$-valued continuous functions on a suitable compact [[Topological space|topological space]]. By [[#References|[a6]]], the classification of $\operatorname {JBW} ^ { * }$-triples can be achieved modulo the classification of von Neumann algebras. Furthermore, in [[#References|[a11]]] all prime $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-triples have been classified using Zel'manov techniques. |
− | The | + | The $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-triples form a large class of complex Banach spaces whose geometry can be described algebraically. Examples of this are: |
− | A bijective linear operator between | + | A bijective linear operator between $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-triples is an isometry if and only if it respects the Jordan triple product. |
− | The M-ideals in | + | The M-ideals in $E$ are precisely the closed triple ideals of $E$. |
− | The open unit ball of | + | The open unit ball of $E$ is the largest convex subset $B \subset E$ containing the origin such that for every $a \in B$ the Bergman operator $z \mapsto z - 2 \{ a a z \} + \{ a \{ a z a \} a \}$ is invertible, and $a \in E$ is an extreme point of the closed unit ball in $E$ if and only if the Bergman operator associated to $a$ is the zero operator. |
− | Real | + | Real $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-triples were studied in [[#References|[a7]]]; these are the real forms of (complex) $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-triples. In general, a $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-triple may have many non-isomorphic real forms. An important class of real $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-triples is obtained from the class of $\operatorname{JB}$-algebras, compare [[#References|[a4]]]. |
====References==== | ====References==== | ||
− | <table>< | + | <table> |
+ | <tr><td valign="top">[a1]</td> <td valign="top"> S. Dineen, "Complete holomorphic vector fields on the second dual of a Banach space" ''Math. Scand.'' , '''59''' (1986) pp. 131–42</td></tr><tr><td valign="top">[a2]</td> <td valign="top"> C.M. Edwards, K. McCrimmon, G.T. Rüttimann, "The range of a structural projection" ''J. Funct. Anal.'' , '''139''' (1996) pp. 196–224</td></tr><tr><td valign="top">[a3]</td> <td valign="top"> Y. Friedman, B. Russo, "The Gelfand–Naimark theorem for $J B ^ { * }$-triples" ''Duke Math. J.'' , '''53''' (1986) pp. 139–148</td></tr><tr><td valign="top">[a4]</td> <td valign="top"> H. Hanche-Olsen, E. Størmer, "Jordan operator algebras" , ''Mon. Stud. Math.'' , '''21''' , Pitman (1984)</td></tr><tr><td valign="top">[a5]</td> <td valign="top"> L.A. Harris, "Bounded symmetric homogeneous domains in infinite dimensional spaces" , ''Lecture Notes in Math.'' , '''364''' , Springer (1973)</td></tr><tr><td valign="top">[a6]</td> <td valign="top"> G. Horn, E. Neher, "Classification of continuous $J B W ^ { x }$-triples" ''Trans. Amer. Math. Soc.'' , '''306''' (1988) pp. 553–578</td></tr><tr><td valign="top">[a7]</td> <td valign="top"> J.M. Isidro, W. Kaup, A. Rodríguez, "On real forms of $J B ^ { * }$-triples" ''Manuscripta Math.'' , '''86''' (1995) pp. 311–335</td></tr><tr><td valign="top">[a8]</td> <td valign="top"> W. Kaup, "A Riemann mapping theorem for bounded symmetric domains in complex Banach spaces" ''Math. Z.'' , '''183''' (1983) pp. 503–529</td></tr><tr><td valign="top">[a9]</td> <td valign="top"> W. Kaup, "Contractive projections on Jordan $C ^ { * }$-algebras and generalizations" ''Math. Scand.'' , '''54''' (1984) pp. 95–100</td></tr><tr><td valign="top">[a10]</td> <td valign="top"> O. Loos, "Bounded symmetric domains and Jordan pairs" ''Math. Lectures. Univ. California at Irvine'' (1977)</td></tr><tr><td valign="top">[a11]</td> <td valign="top"> A. Moreno, A. Rodríguez, "On the Zelmanovian classification of prime $J B ^ { * }$-triples" ''J. Algebra'' , '''226''' (2000) pp. 577–613</td></tr><tr><td valign="top">[a12]</td> <td valign="top"> B. Russo, "Structure of $J B ^ { * }$-triples" , ''Proc. Oberwolfach Conf. Jordan Algebras, 1992'' , de Gruyter (1994)</td></tr><tr><td valign="top">[a13]</td> <td valign="top"> H. Upmeier, "Jordan algebras in analysis, operator theory and quantum mechanics" , ''Regional Conf. Ser. Math.'' , '''67''' , Amer. Math. Soc. (1987)</td></tr><tr><td valign="top">[a14]</td> <td valign="top"> H. Upmeier, "Symmetric Banach manifolds and Jordan $C ^ { * }$-algebras" , ''Math. Studies'' , '''104''' , North-Holland (1985)</td></tr><tr><td valign="top">[a15]</td> <td valign="top"> J.D.M. Wright, "Jordan $C ^ { * }$-algebras" ''Michigan Math. J.'' , '''24''' (1977) pp. 291–302</td></tr> | ||
+ | </table> |
Latest revision as of 06:10, 26 March 2024
$\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-triples were introduced by W. Kaup [a8] in connection with the study of bounded symmetric domains in complex Banach spaces. A definition of $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-triples involving holomorphy is as follows: A $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-triple is a complex Banach space $E$ such that the open unit ball $B$ of $E$ is homogeneous under its full group $G$ of biholomorphic automorphisms (and hence is symmetric, cf. Symmetric space). The main result in [a8] states that to every abstract bounded symmetric domain $D$ in a complex Banach space there exists a unique (up to linear isometry) $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-triple $E$ whose open unit ball is biholomorphically equivalent to $D$. The group $G$ is always a real Banach Lie group (cf. also Lie group, Banach) acting in a natural way on various spaces of holomorphic functions as well as on various submanifolds of the unit sphere in $E$ (in case $E$ has finite dimension, $G$ is semi-simple and also has finite dimension — the induced unitary representation on Bergman space, cf. also Bergman spaces, is of special interest in harmonic analysis).
An equivalent, but more algebraic definition for $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-triples is as follows: The complex Banach space $E$ is a $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-triple if it carries a (necessarily unique) ternary product (called triple product) or trilinear mapping
\begin{equation*} E \times E \times E \rightarrow E , ( x , y , z ) \mapsto \{ x y z \} \end{equation*}
satisfying the following properties for all $a, b , x , y , z \in E$ and $a \square b ^ { * } : E \rightarrow E$ defined by $z \mapsto \{ a b z \}$:
i) $\{ x y z \}$ is symmetric complex bilinear in the outer variables $x$, $z$ and conjugate linear in $y$;
ii) $[ a \square b ^ { * } , x \square y ^ { * } ] = \{ a b x \} \square y ^ { * } - x \square \{ y a b \}^{*}$ (the Jordan triple identity);
iii) $a \square a ^ { * }$, as a linear operator on $E$, is Hermitian and has spectrum $\geq 0$ (cf. also Hermitian operator; Spectrum of an operator);
iv) $\| a \square a ^ { * } \| = \| a \| ^ { 2 }$ (the $C ^ { * }$-condition).
The sesquilinear mapping $( a , b ) \mapsto a \square b ^ { * }$ may be considered as an operator-valued product on $E$. It satisfies $\| a \square b ^ { * } \| \leq \| a \| \cdot \| b \|$ (not an elementary fact!) and condition iv) is analogous to the characteristic property of $C ^ { * }$-algebras (cf. also $C ^ { * }$-algebra). On the other hand, by iii), the above mapping may also be considered as a positive Hermitian operator-valued form on $E$, thus giving a natural orthogonality relation on $E$.
Some examples are:
1) Every $C ^ { * }$-algebra (more precisely, the underlying complex Banach space). The triple product is given by $\{ x y z \} = ( x y ^ { * } z + z y ^ { * } x ) / 2$.
2) Every closed (complex) subtriple of a $C ^ { * }$-algebra. These are also called $\operatorname{JC} ^ { * }$-triples. These triples were originally introduced and intensively studied by L.A. Harris [a5] under the name $J ^ { * }$-algebra (cf. also Banach–Jordan algebra).
3) Every $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-algebra (i.e. Jordan $C ^ { * }$-algebra, [a15]), with $\{ x y z \} = x \circ ( y ^ { * } \circ z ) + z \circ ( y ^ { * } \circ x ) - ( x \circ z ) \circ y ^ { * }$. In particular, the famous exceptional $27$-dimensional $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-algebra $\mathcal{H} _ { 3 } ( \mathbf{O} ^ { c } )$ (which is not a $\operatorname{JC} ^ { * }$-triple) of all Hermitian $( 3 \times 3 )$-matrices over the complex octonian algebra.
4) Every $\operatorname {JBW} ^ { * }$-triple, i.e. a $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-triple having a (necessarily unique) pre-dual. Among these are the $w ^ { * }$-closed subtriples of von Neumann algebras as well as the Cartan factors, which are the building blocks of the $\operatorname {JBW} ^ { * }$-triples of type I (in analogy to the von Neumann algebras of type I, cf. also von Neumann algebra).
The class of all $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-triples is invariant under taking arbitrary $l_ { \infty }$-sums, quotients by closed triple ideals, ultrapowers, biduals [a1], as well as contractive projections [a9]. Notice that the range of a contractive projection on a $C ^ { * }$-algebra in general does not have the structure of a $C ^ { * }$-algebra, but always is a $\operatorname{JC} ^ { * }$-triple. The Gel'fand–Naimark theorem of Y. Friedman and B. Russo [a3] states that each $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-triple can be realized as a subtriple of an $l_ { \infty }$-sum $A \oplus B$ where $A$ is the $\operatorname {JBW} ^ { * }$-triple of all bounded linear operators on a suitable complex Hilbert space and $B$ is the exceptional $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-algebra of all $\mathcal{H} _ { 3 } ( \mathbf{O} ^ { c } )$-valued continuous functions on a suitable compact topological space. By [a6], the classification of $\operatorname {JBW} ^ { * }$-triples can be achieved modulo the classification of von Neumann algebras. Furthermore, in [a11] all prime $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-triples have been classified using Zel'manov techniques.
The $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-triples form a large class of complex Banach spaces whose geometry can be described algebraically. Examples of this are:
A bijective linear operator between $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-triples is an isometry if and only if it respects the Jordan triple product.
The M-ideals in $E$ are precisely the closed triple ideals of $E$.
The open unit ball of $E$ is the largest convex subset $B \subset E$ containing the origin such that for every $a \in B$ the Bergman operator $z \mapsto z - 2 \{ a a z \} + \{ a \{ a z a \} a \}$ is invertible, and $a \in E$ is an extreme point of the closed unit ball in $E$ if and only if the Bergman operator associated to $a$ is the zero operator.
Real $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-triples were studied in [a7]; these are the real forms of (complex) $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-triples. In general, a $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-triple may have many non-isomorphic real forms. An important class of real $\operatorname{JB} ^ { * }$-triples is obtained from the class of $\operatorname{JB}$-algebras, compare [a4].
References
[a1] | S. Dineen, "Complete holomorphic vector fields on the second dual of a Banach space" Math. Scand. , 59 (1986) pp. 131–42 |
[a2] | C.M. Edwards, K. McCrimmon, G.T. Rüttimann, "The range of a structural projection" J. Funct. Anal. , 139 (1996) pp. 196–224 |
[a3] | Y. Friedman, B. Russo, "The Gelfand–Naimark theorem for $J B ^ { * }$-triples" Duke Math. J. , 53 (1986) pp. 139–148 |
[a4] | H. Hanche-Olsen, E. Størmer, "Jordan operator algebras" , Mon. Stud. Math. , 21 , Pitman (1984) |
[a5] | L.A. Harris, "Bounded symmetric homogeneous domains in infinite dimensional spaces" , Lecture Notes in Math. , 364 , Springer (1973) |
[a6] | G. Horn, E. Neher, "Classification of continuous $J B W ^ { x }$-triples" Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. , 306 (1988) pp. 553–578 |
[a7] | J.M. Isidro, W. Kaup, A. Rodríguez, "On real forms of $J B ^ { * }$-triples" Manuscripta Math. , 86 (1995) pp. 311–335 |
[a8] | W. Kaup, "A Riemann mapping theorem for bounded symmetric domains in complex Banach spaces" Math. Z. , 183 (1983) pp. 503–529 |
[a9] | W. Kaup, "Contractive projections on Jordan $C ^ { * }$-algebras and generalizations" Math. Scand. , 54 (1984) pp. 95–100 |
[a10] | O. Loos, "Bounded symmetric domains and Jordan pairs" Math. Lectures. Univ. California at Irvine (1977) |
[a11] | A. Moreno, A. Rodríguez, "On the Zelmanovian classification of prime $J B ^ { * }$-triples" J. Algebra , 226 (2000) pp. 577–613 |
[a12] | B. Russo, "Structure of $J B ^ { * }$-triples" , Proc. Oberwolfach Conf. Jordan Algebras, 1992 , de Gruyter (1994) |
[a13] | H. Upmeier, "Jordan algebras in analysis, operator theory and quantum mechanics" , Regional Conf. Ser. Math. , 67 , Amer. Math. Soc. (1987) |
[a14] | H. Upmeier, "Symmetric Banach manifolds and Jordan $C ^ { * }$-algebras" , Math. Studies , 104 , North-Holland (1985) |
[a15] | J.D.M. Wright, "Jordan $C ^ { * }$-algebras" Michigan Math. J. , 24 (1977) pp. 291–302 |
JB*-triple. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=JB*-triple&oldid=18845