On Primary Ideals in the Group Algebra of a Nilpotent Lie Group.
We first study the behavior of weights on a simply connected nilpotent Lie group G. Then for a subalgebra A of L¹(G) containing the Schwartz algebra 𝓢(G) as a dense subspace, we characterize all closed two-sided ideals of A whose hull reduces to one point which is a character.
Let G be a Lie group and A(G) the Fourier algebra of G. We describe sufficient conditions for complex-valued functions to operate on elements u ∈ A(G) of certain differentiability classes in terms of the dimension of the group G. Furthermore, generalizing a result of Kirsch and Müller [Ark. Mat. 18 (1980), 145-155] we prove that closed subsets E of a smooth m-dimensional submanifold of a Lie group G having a certain cone property are sets of smooth spectral synthesis. For such sets we give an estimate...
Nous donnons dans cet article une désintégration en irréductibles explicite des restrictions aux sous-groupes connexes fermés des représentations unitaires et irréductibles pour les groupes de Lie nilpotents simplement connexes. Ainsi, nous décrivons un opérateur d'entrelacement qui ne tient pas compte des multiplicités intervenant dans la désintégration.
This is a sequel to our recent work (2012) on the Fourier-Stieltjes algebra B(G) of a topological group G. We introduce the unitary closure G̅ of G and use it to study the Fourier algebra A(G) of G. We also study operator amenability and fixed point property as well as other related geometric properties for A(G).
For locally compact, second countable, type I groups G, we characterize all closed (two-sided) translation invariant subspaces of L²(G). We establish a similar result for K-biinvariant L²-functions (K a fixed maximal compact subgroup) in the context of semisimple Lie groups.
Let G be a compactly generated, locally compact group with polynomial growth and let ω be a weight on G. We look for general conditions on the weight which allow us to develop a functional calculus on a total part of L(G,ω). This functional calculus is then used to study harmonic analysis properties of L(G,ω), such as the Wiener property and Domar's theorem.
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