Kadison transitivity theorem

In mathematics, Kadison transitivity theorem is a result in the theory of C*-algebras that, in effect, asserts the equivalence of the notions of topological irreducibility and algebraic irreducibility of representations of C*-algebras. It implies that, for irreducible representations of C*-algebras, the only non-zero linear invariant subspace is the whole space.

The theorem, proved by Richard Kadison, was surprising as a priori there is no reason to believe that all topologically irreducible representations are also algebraically irreducible.

Statement edit

A family   of bounded operators on a Hilbert space   is said to act topologically irreducibly when   and   are the only closed stable subspaces under  . The family   is said to act algebraically irreducibly if   and   are the only linear manifolds in   stable under  .

Theorem. [1] If the C*-algebra   acts topologically irreducibly on the Hilbert space   is a set of vectors and   is a linearly independent set of vectors in  , there is an   in   such that  . If   for some self-adjoint operator  , then   can be chosen to be self-adjoint.

Corollary. If the C*-algebra   acts topologically irreducibly on the Hilbert space  , then it acts algebraically irreducibly.

References edit

  1. ^ Theorem 5.4.3; Kadison, R. V.; Ringrose, J. R., Fundamentals of the Theory of Operator Algebras, Vol. I : Elementary Theory, ISBN 978-0821808191