In functional analysis, the Calkin algebra, named after John Williams Calkin, is the quotient of B(H), the ring of bounded linear operators on a separable infinite-dimensional Hilbert space H, by the ideal K(H) of compact operators. Here the addition in B(H) is addition of operators and the multiplication in B(H) is composition of operators; it is easy to verify that these operations make B(H) into a ring. When scalar multiplication is also included, B(H) becomes in fact an algebra over the same field over which H is a Hilbert space.
Properties
- Since K(H) is a maximal norm-closed ideal in B(H), the Calkin algebra is simple. In fact, K(H) is the only closed ideal in B(H).
- As a quotient of a C*-algebra by a two-sided ideal, the Calkin algebra is a C*-algebra itself and there is a short exact sequence
- As a C*-algebra, the Calkin algebra is not isomorphic to an algebra of operators on a separable Hilbert space. The Gelfand-Naimark-Segal construction implies that the Calkin algebra is isomorphic to an algebra of operators on a nonseparable Hilbert space, but while for many other C*-algebras there are explicit descriptions of such Hilbert spaces, the Calkin algebra does not have an explicit representation.
- The existence of an outer automorphism of the Calkin algebra is shown to be independent of ZFC, by work of Phillips and Weaver, and Farah.34
Generalizations
- One can define a Calkin algebra for any infinite-dimensional complex Hilbert space, not just separable ones.
- An analogous construction can be made by replacing H with a Banach space, which is also called a Calkin algebra.5
- The Calkin algebra is the Corona algebra of the algebra of compact operators on a Hilbert space.
References
"A Community of Scholars, the Institute for Advanced Study, Faculty and Members 1930–1980" (PDF). ias.edu. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-11-24. Retrieved 2020-01-17. https://web.archive.org/web/20111124234612/http://library.ias.edu/files/pdfs/hs/cos.pdf ↩
Calkin, J. W. (1 October 1941). "Two-Sided Ideals and Congruences in the Ring of Bounded Operators in Hilbert Space". The Annals of Mathematics. 42 (4): 839–873. doi:10.2307/1968771. JSTOR 1968771. /wiki/Doi_(identifier) ↩
Phillips, N. Christopher; Weaver, Nik (1 July 2007). "The Calkin algebra has outer automorphisms". Duke Mathematical Journal. 139 (1): 185–202. arXiv:math/0606594. doi:10.1215/S0012-7094-07-13915-2. /wiki/ArXiv_(identifier) ↩
Farah, Ilijas (1 March 2011). "All automorphisms of the Calkin algebra are inner". Annals of Mathematics. 173 (2): 619–661. arXiv:0705.3085. doi:10.4007/annals.2011.173.2.1. /wiki/ArXiv_(identifier) ↩
Appell, Jürgen (2005). "Measures of noncompactness, condensing operators and fixed points: An application-oriented survey". Fixed Point Theory. 6 (2): 157–229. ↩