Approximate amenability of semigroup algebras and Segal algebras

H. G. Dales; R. J. Loy

  • 2010

Abstract

top
In recent years, there have been several studies of various ’approximate’ versions of the key notion of amenability, which is defined for all Banach algebras; these studies began with work of Ghahramani and Loy in 2004. The present memoir continues such work: we shall define various notions of approximate amenability, and we shall discuss and extend the known background, which considers the relationships between different versions of approximate amenability. There are a number of open questions on these relationships; these will be considered. In Chapter 1, we shall give all the relevant definitions and a number of basic results, partly surveying existing work; we shall concentrate on the case of Banach function algebras. In Chapter 2, we shall discuss these properties for the semigroup algebra ℓ¹(S) of a semigroup S. In the case where S has only finitely many idempotents, ℓ¹(S) is approximately amenable if and only if it is amenable. In Chapter 3, we shall consider the class of weighted semigroup algebras of the form ¹ ( , ω ) , where ω: ℤ → [1,∞) is an arbitrary function. We shall determine necessary and sufficient conditions on ω for these Banach sequence algebras to have each of the various approximate amenability properties that interest us. In this way we shall illuminate the implications between these properties. In Chapter 4, we shall discuss Segal algebras on and on ℝ. It is a conjecture that every proper Segal algebra on fails to be approximately amenable; we shall establish this conjecture for a wide class of Segal algebras.

How to cite

top

H. G. Dales, and R. J. Loy. Approximate amenability of semigroup algebras and Segal algebras. 2010. <http://eudml.org/doc/285945>.

@book{H2010,
abstract = {In recent years, there have been several studies of various ’approximate’ versions of the key notion of amenability, which is defined for all Banach algebras; these studies began with work of Ghahramani and Loy in 2004. The present memoir continues such work: we shall define various notions of approximate amenability, and we shall discuss and extend the known background, which considers the relationships between different versions of approximate amenability. There are a number of open questions on these relationships; these will be considered. In Chapter 1, we shall give all the relevant definitions and a number of basic results, partly surveying existing work; we shall concentrate on the case of Banach function algebras. In Chapter 2, we shall discuss these properties for the semigroup algebra ℓ¹(S) of a semigroup S. In the case where S has only finitely many idempotents, ℓ¹(S) is approximately amenable if and only if it is amenable. In Chapter 3, we shall consider the class of weighted semigroup algebras of the form $ℓ¹(ℕ_\{∧\},ω)$, where ω: ℤ → [1,∞) is an arbitrary function. We shall determine necessary and sufficient conditions on ω for these Banach sequence algebras to have each of the various approximate amenability properties that interest us. In this way we shall illuminate the implications between these properties. In Chapter 4, we shall discuss Segal algebras on and on ℝ. It is a conjecture that every proper Segal algebra on fails to be approximately amenable; we shall establish this conjecture for a wide class of Segal algebras.},
author = {H. G. Dales, R. J. Loy},
keywords = {amenable Banach algebra; amenable group; approximately amenable; approximate diagonal; approximate identity; derivation; Feinstein algebra; Fourier transform; inner derivation; pointwise approximately amenable; Segal algebra},
language = {eng},
title = {Approximate amenability of semigroup algebras and Segal algebras},
url = {http://eudml.org/doc/285945},
year = {2010},
}

TY - BOOK
AU - H. G. Dales
AU - R. J. Loy
TI - Approximate amenability of semigroup algebras and Segal algebras
PY - 2010
AB - In recent years, there have been several studies of various ’approximate’ versions of the key notion of amenability, which is defined for all Banach algebras; these studies began with work of Ghahramani and Loy in 2004. The present memoir continues such work: we shall define various notions of approximate amenability, and we shall discuss and extend the known background, which considers the relationships between different versions of approximate amenability. There are a number of open questions on these relationships; these will be considered. In Chapter 1, we shall give all the relevant definitions and a number of basic results, partly surveying existing work; we shall concentrate on the case of Banach function algebras. In Chapter 2, we shall discuss these properties for the semigroup algebra ℓ¹(S) of a semigroup S. In the case where S has only finitely many idempotents, ℓ¹(S) is approximately amenable if and only if it is amenable. In Chapter 3, we shall consider the class of weighted semigroup algebras of the form $ℓ¹(ℕ_{∧},ω)$, where ω: ℤ → [1,∞) is an arbitrary function. We shall determine necessary and sufficient conditions on ω for these Banach sequence algebras to have each of the various approximate amenability properties that interest us. In this way we shall illuminate the implications between these properties. In Chapter 4, we shall discuss Segal algebras on and on ℝ. It is a conjecture that every proper Segal algebra on fails to be approximately amenable; we shall establish this conjecture for a wide class of Segal algebras.
LA - eng
KW - amenable Banach algebra; amenable group; approximately amenable; approximate diagonal; approximate identity; derivation; Feinstein algebra; Fourier transform; inner derivation; pointwise approximately amenable; Segal algebra
UR - http://eudml.org/doc/285945
ER -

NotesEmbed ?

top

You must be logged in to post comments.

To embed these notes on your page include the following JavaScript code on your page where you want the notes to appear.

Only the controls for the widget will be shown in your chosen language. Notes will be shown in their authored language.

Tells the widget how many notes to show per page. You can cycle through additional notes using the next and previous controls.

    
                

Note: Best practice suggests putting the JavaScript code just before the closing </body> tag.