ON A METHOD FOR CALCULATING AND ESTIMATING THE GLOBAL HOMOLOGICAL DIMENSION OF BANACH ALGEBRAS

1972 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 125-138 ◽  
Author(s):  
A J Helemskiĭ
2000 ◽  
Vol 42 (1) ◽  
pp. 15-24
Author(s):  
L. I. Pugach ◽  
M. C. White

In this paper we deduce the existence of analytic structure in a neighbourhood of a maximal ideal M in the spectrum of a commutative Banach algebra, A, from homological assumptions. We assume properties of certain of the cohomology groups H^n(A,A/M), rather than the stronger conditions on the homological dimension of the maximal ideal the first author has considered in previous papers. The conclusion is correspondingly weaker: in the previous work one deduces the existence of a Gel'fand neighbourhood with analytic structure, here we deduce only the existence of a metric neighbourhood with analytic structure. The main method is to consider products of certain co-cycles to deduce facts about the symmetric second cohomology, which is known to be related to the deformation theory of algebras.1991 Mathematics Subject Classification. 46J20, 46M20.


2019 ◽  
Vol 62 (4) ◽  
pp. 1173-1187
Author(s):  
Kazuhiro Kawamura

AbstractFor a compact metric space (K, d), LipK denotes the Banach algebra of all complex-valued Lipschitz functions on (K, d). We show that the continuous Hochschild cohomology Hn(LipK, (LipK)*) and Hn(LipK, ℂe) are both infinite-dimensional vector spaces for each n ≥ 1 if the space K contains a certain infinite sequence which converges to a point e ∈ K. Here (LipK)* is the dual module of LipK and ℂe denotes the complex numbers with a LipK-bimodule structure defined by evaluations of LipK-functions at e. Examples of such metric spaces include all compact Riemannian manifolds, compact geodesic metric spaces and infinite compact subsets of ℝ. In particular, the (small) global homological dimension of LipK is infinite for every such space. Our proof uses the description of point derivations by Sherbert [‘The structure of ideals and point derivations in Banach algebras of Lipschitz functions’, Trans. Amer. Math. Soc.111 (1964), 240–272] and directly constructs non-trivial cocycles with the help of alternating cocycles of Johnson [‘Higher-dimensional weak amenability’, Studia Math.123 (1997), 117–134]. An alternating construction of cocycles on the basis of the idea of Kleshchev [‘Homological dimension of Banach algebras of smooth functions is equal to infinity’, Vest. Math. Mosk. Univ. Ser. 1. Mat. Mech.6 (1988), 57–60] is also discussed.


1992 ◽  
Vol 34 (3) ◽  
pp. 369-378 ◽  
Author(s):  
Z. A. Lykova

The paper is related to the area which was recently called topological homology [3, 6, 12, 16, 4]. We consider questions associated with the central Hochschild cohomology of C*-algebras. The study of the latter was begun by J. Phillips and I. Raeburn in [9, 10], when they were investigating some problems of the theory of perturbations of C*-algebras. In [8] we obtained a description of the structure of C*-algebras with central bidimension zero: it was proved that these C*-algebras are unital and have continuous trace. In the special case of separable and a priori unital C*-algebras this statement was proved by J. Phillips and I. Raeburn in [11] with the help of a different approach. The question was raised. Which values can the central bidimension of C*-algebras take? In the present paper it is shown that, for any CCR-algebra A having at least one infinite-dimensional irreducible representation, the central bidimension and the global central homological dimension of A are greater than one. At the same time it is proved that there exist CCR-algebras which are centrally biprojective, but which have both dimensions equal to one. This situation contrasts with the state of affairs in the “traditional” theory of the Banach Hochschild cohomology. Recall [3, Ch. 5] that the bidimension and the global homological dimension of any infinite-dimensional biprojective C*-algebra are equal to two. Besides, there is no CCR-algebra of bidimension one (respectively, global homological dimension one). See [7].


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