Quasitrace

From HandWiki

In mathematics, especially functional analysis, a quasitrace is a not necessarily additive tracial functional on a C*-algebra. An additive quasitrace is called a trace. It is a major open problem if every quasitrace is a trace.

Definition

A quasitrace on a C*-algebra A is a map [math]\displaystyle{ \tau\colon A_+\to[0,\infty] }[/math] such that:

  • [math]\displaystyle{ \tau }[/math] is homogeneous:
[math]\displaystyle{ \tau(\lambda a)=\lambda\tau(a) }[/math] for every [math]\displaystyle{ a\in A_+ }[/math] and [math]\displaystyle{ \lambda\in[0,\infty) }[/math].
  • [math]\displaystyle{ \tau }[/math] is tracial:
[math]\displaystyle{ \tau(xx^*)=\tau(x^*x) }[/math] for every [math]\displaystyle{ x\in A }[/math].
  • [math]\displaystyle{ \tau }[/math] is additive on commuting elements:

[math]\displaystyle{ \tau(a+b)=\tau(a)+\tau(b) }[/math] for every [math]\displaystyle{ a,b\in A_+ }[/math] that satisfy [math]\displaystyle{ ab=ba }[/math].

  • and such that for each [math]\displaystyle{ n\geq 1 }[/math] the induced map
[math]\displaystyle{ \tau_n\colon M_n(A)_+\to[0,\infty], (a_{j,k})_{j,k=1,...,n}\mapsto\tau(a_{11})+...\tau(a_{nn}) }[/math]

has the same properties.

A quasitrace [math]\displaystyle{ \tau }[/math] is:

  • bounded if
[math]\displaystyle{ \sup\{\tau(a):a\in A_+, \|a\|\leq 1\} \lt \infty. }[/math]
  • normalized if
[math]\displaystyle{ \sup\{\tau(a):a\in A_+, \|a\|\leq 1\} = 1. }[/math]
  • lower semicontinuous if
[math]\displaystyle{ \{a\in A_+ : \tau(a)\leq t\} }[/math] is closed for each [math]\displaystyle{ t\in[0,\infty) }[/math].

Variants

  • A 1-quasitrace is a map [math]\displaystyle{ A_+\to[0,\infty] }[/math] that is just homogeneous, tracial and additive on commuting elements, but does not necessarily extend to such a map on matrix algebras over A. If a 1-quasitrace extends to the matrix algebra [math]\displaystyle{ M_n(A) }[/math], then it is called a n-quasitrace. There are examples of 1-quasitraces that are not 2-quasitraces. One can show that every 2-quasitrace is automatically a n-quasitrace for every [math]\displaystyle{ n\geq 1 }[/math]. Sometimes in the literature, a quasitrace means a 1-quasitrace and a 2-quasitrace means a quasitrace.

Properties

  • A quasitrace that is additive on all elements is called a trace.
  • Uffe Haagerup showed that every quasitrace on a unital, exact C*-algebra is additive and thus a trace. The article of Haagerup [1] was circulated as handwritten notes in 1991 and remained unpublished until 2014. Blanchard and Kirchberg removed the assumption of unitality in Haagerup's result.[2] As of today (August 2020) it remains an open problem if every quasitrace is additive.
  • Joachim Cuntz showed that a simple, unital C*-algebra is stably finite if and only if it admits a dimension function. A simple, unital C*-algebra is stably finite if and only if it admits a normalized quasitrace. An important consequence is that every simple, unital, stably finite, exact C*-algebra admits a tracial state.

Notes

  1. (Haagerup 2014)
  2. Blanchard, Kirchberg, 2004, Remarks 2.29(i)

References