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2 votes
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103 views

Morphism of discrete quantum groups

In the paper Kazhdan's Property T for Discrete Quantum Groups , we read the following fragment: First, note that I think there is a typo and that codomain and domain of the dual maps have to be ...
Andromeda's user avatar
  • 175
1 vote
1 answer
80 views

Show that if $V\in M(B_0(H)\otimes A)$, then $V(B(H)\otimes 1)V^*\not\subseteq B(H)\otimes A$ where $A$ is a specific unital $C^*$-algebra

Let $\mathbb{G}$ be a compact (quantum group) with function algebra $(C(\mathbb{G}), \Delta)$ and Haar state $\varphi_{\mathbb{G}}$. Consider the associated GNS-representation $\pi_{\mathbb{G}}: C(\...
Andromeda's user avatar
  • 175
3 votes
1 answer
116 views

Unitary in adjointable operators associated with equivariant Hilbert module

Consider the following fragment from the article "Tannaka–Krein duality for compact quantum homogeneous spaces. I. General theory" by De Commer and Yamashita: How exactly is $\mathcal{E}\...
Andromeda's user avatar
  • 175
4 votes
1 answer
167 views

Reference request: decomposability of $\mathbb{G}$-Hilbert modules

Let $\mathbb{G}$ be a compact quantum group, $B$ be a $C^*$-algebra together with a right action $$\beta: B \to B\otimes C(\mathbb{G})$$ which is a non-degenerate $*$-homomorphism satisfying $(\beta \...
J. De Ro's user avatar
  • 525
3 votes
1 answer
229 views

Relating different definitions of dual of a compact quantum group

Let $\mathbb{G}$ be a compact quantum group in the sense of Woronowicz. We can look at its associated dense Hopf$^*$-subalgebra $\mathbb{C}[\mathbb{G}]$. Hence, in the framework of multiplier Hopf $*$-...
Andromeda's user avatar
  • 175
1 vote
0 answers
137 views

Representation of quantum groups

Let $\mathbb{G}=(A,\Delta_A)$ be a C*-quantum group and $\mathbb{H}=(B,\Delta_B)$ be a closed quantum subgroup of $\mathbb{G}$. We say that $\mathbb{H}$ is a closed quantum subgroup of $\mathbb{G}$ if ...
Dastan's user avatar
  • 121
3 votes
1 answer
163 views

Norm antipode on a Kac-type compact quantum group

Let $\mathbb{G}$ be a $C^*$-algebraic compact quantum group. Consider the associated dense Hopf$^*$-subalgebra $\mathcal{O}(\mathbb{G})$ and let $S: \mathcal{O}(\mathbb{G})\to \mathcal{O}(\mathbb{G})$ ...
Andromeda's user avatar
  • 175
3 votes
1 answer
213 views

Woronowicz characters are multiplicative

I'm reading the book "Compact quantum groups and their representation categories" by Neshveyev-Tuset. Let $G$ be a $C^*$-algebraic compact quantum group with function algebra $(C(G), \Delta)...
Andromeda's user avatar
  • 175
4 votes
0 answers
165 views

Tensor product of representations on a compact quantum group

Let $\mathbb{G}$ be a $C^*$-algebraic compact quantum group (in the sense of Woronowicz) with function algebra $(C(\mathbb{G}), \Delta)$. Let $X \in M(B_0(H)\otimes C(\mathbb{G}))$ and $Y \in M(B_0(K)\...
Andromeda's user avatar
  • 175
5 votes
1 answer
209 views

Subrepresentations of C*-algebraic compact quantum groups

Let $\mathbb{G}$ be a compact quantum group with function algebra $(C(\mathbb{G}), \Delta)$ (in the sense of Woronowicz). Let $X \in M(B_0(H) \otimes C(\mathbb{G}))$ be a (possibly infinite-...
Andromeda's user avatar
  • 175
3 votes
1 answer
142 views

Nonstandard Podles spheres as $U_c(\frak{h})$ invariants

In this paper Podles introduced a $2$-parameter family of $q$-deformed spheres $S_{q,c}$ that are now called the "Podles spheres". The case of $c=0$ is very special and is known as the "...
Jake Wetlock's user avatar
  • 1,144
6 votes
1 answer
194 views

Morphisms between compact quantum groups

Let $(A, \Delta_A)$ and $(B, \Delta_B)$ be two compact quantum groups (in the sense of Woronowicz). I would be tempted to define a morphism $(A, \Delta_A) \to (B, \Delta_B)$ to be a unital $*$-...
user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
181 views

Matrix coefficients of a compact quantum group

Let $(A, \Delta)$ be a $C^*$-algebraic compact quantum group (in the sense of Woronowicz). Definition: A corepresentation matrix of $(A, \Delta)$ is a matrix $a=(a_{i,j}) \in M_n(A)$ such that $$\...
user avatar
9 votes
1 answer
585 views

Finite compact quantum groups

Let $(A, \Delta)$ be a $C^*$-algebraic compact quantum group (in the sense of Woronowicz). It is called finite if $A$ is a finite-dimensional $C^*$-algebra. By elementary $C^*$-algebra theory, we ...
user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
202 views

Relating different constructions of the universal compact quantum group

Before asking my question, let me give the necessary background. Readers that are comfortable with the language of universal and reduced compact quantum groups may skip the following two sections. ...
user avatar
6 votes
1 answer
338 views

Invertible elements of the Hopf algebra quantum $SU(2)$

Let $SU_q(2)$ be the (polynomial) Hopf algebra introduced by Woronocicz called the quantum special unitary group. For details see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compact_quantum_group (Note that on the ...
Jake Wetlock's user avatar
  • 1,144
2 votes
1 answer
393 views

Peter-Weyl theorem (compact quantum groups)

I'm reading the paper Notes on compact quantum groups. In this paper, the following theorem is proven: Question: Why is the marked equality true?
user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
177 views

Direct sum of representations of a compact quantum group

Let $(A, \Delta)$ be a compact quantum group and $\{(H_\alpha, v_\alpha)\}$ be a collection of representations of $A$. That is, $$v_\alpha \in M(B_0(H_\alpha) \otimes A); \quad \quad(\text{id}\otimes \...
user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
261 views

Definition intertwiner of representations of compact quantum groups

Before asking my question, let me introduce the relevant terminology. Throughout, let $(A, \Delta)$ be a compact quantum group. Definition: A representation $v$ on the Hilbert space $H$ is an element $...
user avatar
2 votes
2 answers
217 views

Kernel of intertwiner is invariant (compact quantum groups)

Before asking my question, let me introduce the relevant terminology. Throughout, let $(A, \Delta)$ be a compact quantum group. Definition: A representation $v$ on the Hilbert space $H$ is an element $...
user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
158 views

Showing a product on a character space is continuous

Quoting from Timmermann's An invitation to quantum groups and duality: Prop. 5.1.3 Let $A$ be a commutative algebra of functions on a compact quantum group. Then there exists a compact group $G$ and ...
JP McCarthy's user avatar
  • 1,027
2 votes
2 answers
477 views

Comultiplication of elements of partition of unity

Let $F(G)$ be the algebra of functions on a finite quantum group $G$ (so that $F(G)$ is a finite dimensional $\mathrm{C}^*$-Hopf algebra). Suppose that $\{p_i:i=0,\dots,d-1\}\subset F(G)$ is a ...
JP McCarthy's user avatar
  • 1,027
12 votes
0 answers
285 views

Is there a non-Kac complex finite dimensional semisimple Hopf algebra?

A complex (finite-dimensional) Hopf algebra is said to be a Kac algebra if it is a ${\rm C^{\star}}$-algebra in such a way that the comultiplication $\Delta$ is a $\star$-homomorphism. Obviously, a (...
Sebastien Palcoux's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
283 views

Reference request quantum SU(3)

Woronowicz shows that the C*-algebras of quantum $SU(2)$ are isomorphic (only as C*-algebras, forgetting the quantum group structure). Are there similar results for quantum $SU(n)$ for $n \geq 3$?
Clipper Gomberg's user avatar