Periodic Reporting for period 1 - IPOA (Independence Phenomena in Operator Algebras)
Okres sprawozdawczy: 2020-11-01 do 2022-10-31
The overall objectives are concretely represented by a series of goals concerning various topics in operator algebras where applications of set-theoretic and model-theoretic methods have already proven to be successful and fruitful, as well as new problems and questions. These include
- the study of massive quotient structures, such as corona algebras and Cech-Stone reminders;
- the employment of combinatorial set-theoretic statements and game-like techniques for the construction of interesting C*-algebras;
- the study of automorphism groups and of dynamical systems of C*-algebras.
The aforementioned work is part of a broader line of research investigating how set-theoretic axioms influence the nature and the rigidity of massive quotient structures in various categories, such as Boolean algebras, topological spaces and operator algebras. The researcher participated in the writing of an expository survey on this topic, a joint work with Ilijas Farah, Saeed Ghasemi and Alessandro Vignati. This survey aims to be an exhaustive point of reference for researchers who approach this subject.
The main collaboration produced by the researcher in the course of this project with other researcher in Paris consists of an application of infinitary model theory to the study of C*-algebras which fall within the scope of Elliott Classification Program. The latter refers to one of the most active and vibrant areas of research in operator algebras, aiming to classify sufficiently regular C*-algebras (usually referred to as classifiable C*-algebras) by computable invariants arising from the K-theory of a C*-algebra. One of the key methods in this program are the intertwining arguments allowing to build isomorphisms between C*-algebras starting from isomorphisms between the invariants. With other collaborator in Paris, the researcher conducted a deep analysis of how these arguments relate and combine with back-and-forth methods and Ehrenfeucht-Fraïssé games coming from model theory, focusing on approximately finite C*-algebras (AF-algebras). This connection proved to be extremely fruitful, leading to an extremely clear picture of how the model theoretic features of an AF-algebra are determined by those of its corresponding Elliott Invariant, which in this case reduces to its dimension group.
In the course of this project, the researcher included in his work topics which are currently central in the community of operator algebraists, focusing in particular on problems disjoint from logic and arising in the context of C*-dynamics and in the study of crossed products of C*-algebras. This effort led to a series of paper and significant advancements in the state of the art, with various researchers from University of Muenster, Gothenburg University and Ben-Gurion University of the Negev.
The results produced over the two years of the present project, for what concerns C*-dynamics and crossed products of classifiable C*-algebras, largely expanded the previous knowledge on the topic and represent the current state of the art. More precisely, the theorems presented in the papers 'Strongly outer actions of amenable groups on Z-stable nuclear C*-algebras' and 'Dynamical comparison and Z-stability for crossed products of simple C*-algebras' led to significant advancements for what concerns our understanding of equivariantly Z-stable actions. The research developed over the course of the present project, and its continuation envisioned for the upcoming years, can be expected to be relevant also for the classification, up to cocycle conjugacy, of actions of amenable groups on classifiable C*-algebras by suitable computable invariants, in analogy to what was done for actions on von Neumann algebras by Connes, Jones and Ocneanu.