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Lectures on Amenability [electronic resource] / by Volker Runde.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Lecture Notes in Mathematics ; 1774Publisher: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2002Description: XIV, 302 p. online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9783540455608
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 515.7 23
LOC classification:
  • QA319-329.9
Online resources:
Contents:
Paradoxical decompositions -- Amenable, locally comact groups -- Amenable Banach algebras -- Exemples of amenable Banach algebras -- Amenability-like properties -- Banach homology -- C* and W*-algebras -- Operator amenability -- Geometry of spaces of homomorphisms -- Open problems: Abstract harmonic analysis -- Tensor products -- Banach space properties -- Operator spaces -- List of symbols -- References -- Index.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: The notion of amenability has its origins in the beginnings of modern measure theory: Does a finitely additive set function exist which is invariant under a certain group action? Since the 1940s, amenability has become an important concept in abstract harmonic analysis (or rather, more generally, in the theory of semitopological semigroups). In 1972, B.E. Johnson showed that the amenability of a locally compact group G can be characterized in terms of the Hochschild cohomology of its group algebra L^1(G): this initiated the theory of amenable Banach algebras. Since then, amenability has penetrated other branches of mathematics, such as von Neumann algebras, operator spaces, and even differential geometry. Lectures on Amenability introduces second year graduate students to this fascinating area of modern mathematics and leads them to a level from where they can go on to read original papers on the subject. Numerous exercises are interspersed in the text.
Item type: E-BOOKS
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Paradoxical decompositions -- Amenable, locally comact groups -- Amenable Banach algebras -- Exemples of amenable Banach algebras -- Amenability-like properties -- Banach homology -- C* and W*-algebras -- Operator amenability -- Geometry of spaces of homomorphisms -- Open problems: Abstract harmonic analysis -- Tensor products -- Banach space properties -- Operator spaces -- List of symbols -- References -- Index.

The notion of amenability has its origins in the beginnings of modern measure theory: Does a finitely additive set function exist which is invariant under a certain group action? Since the 1940s, amenability has become an important concept in abstract harmonic analysis (or rather, more generally, in the theory of semitopological semigroups). In 1972, B.E. Johnson showed that the amenability of a locally compact group G can be characterized in terms of the Hochschild cohomology of its group algebra L^1(G): this initiated the theory of amenable Banach algebras. Since then, amenability has penetrated other branches of mathematics, such as von Neumann algebras, operator spaces, and even differential geometry. Lectures on Amenability introduces second year graduate students to this fascinating area of modern mathematics and leads them to a level from where they can go on to read original papers on the subject. Numerous exercises are interspersed in the text.

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The Institute of Mathematical Sciences, Chennai, India