Kaplansky's conjecture

The mathematician Irving Kaplansky is notable for proposing numerous conjectures in several branches of mathematics, including a list of ten conjectures on Hopf algebras. They are usually known as Kaplansky's conjectures.

Kaplansky's conjectures on group rings

Let K be a field, and G a torsion-free group. Kaplansky's zero divisor conjecture states that the group ring K[G] does not contain nontrivial zero divisors, that is, it is a domain. Two related conjectures are:

  • K[G] does not contain any non-trivial units – if ab = 1 in K[G], then a = k.g for some k in K and g in G.
  • K[G] does not contain any non-trivial idempotents – if a2 = a, then a = 1 or a = 0.

The zero-divisor conjecture implies the idempotent conjecture and is implied by the unit conjecture. As of 2017 all three are open, though there are positive solutions for large classes of groups for both the idempotent and zero-divisor conjectures. For example the zero-divisor conjecture is known to hold for all virtually solvable groups and more generally also for all residually torsion-free solvable groups. These solutions go through establishing first the conclusion to the Atiyah conjecture on -Betti numbers, from which the zero-divisor conjecture easily follows.

The idempotent conjecture has a generalisation, the Kadison idempotent conjecture, also known as the KadisonKaplansky conjecture, for elements in the reduced group C*-algebra. In this setting it is known that if the Farrell–Jones conjecture holds for K[G] then so does the idempotent conjecture. The latter has been positively solved for an extremely large class of groups, including for example all hyperbolic groups.

The unit conjecture is also known to hold in many groups but its partial solutions are much less robust than the other two: for example there is a torsion-free 3-dimensional crystallographic group for which it is not known whether all units are trivial. This conjecture is not known to follow from any analytic statement as the other two, and so the cases where it is known to hold have all been established via a direct combinatorial approach involving the so-called unique products property.

Kaplansky's conjecture on Banach algebras

This conjecture states that every algebra homomorphism from the Banach algebra C(X) (continuous complex-valued functions on X, where X is a compact Hausdorff space) into any other Banach algebra, is necessarily continuous. The conjecture is equivalent to the statement that every algebra norm on C(X) is equivalent to the usual uniform norm. (Kaplansky himself had earlier shown that every complete algebra norm on C(X) is equivalent to the uniform norm.)

In the mid-1970s, H. Garth Dales and J. Esterle independently proved that, if one furthermore assumes the validity of the continuum hypothesis, there exist compact Hausdorff spaces X and discontinuous homomorphisms from C(X) to some Banach algebra, giving counterexamples to the conjecture.

In 1976, R. M. Solovay (building on work of H. Woodin) exhibited a model of ZFC (Zermelo–Fraenkel set theory + axiom of choice) in which Kaplansky's conjecture is true. Kaplansky's conjecture is thus an example of a statement undecidable in ZFC.

References

  • H. G. Dales, Automatic continuity: a survey. Bull. London Math. Soc. 10 (1978), no. 2, 129–183.
  • W. Lück, L2-Invariants: Theory and Applications to Geometry and K-Theory. Berlin:Springer 2002 ISBN 3-540-43566-2
  • D.S. Passman, The Algebraic Structure of Group Rings, Pure and Applied Mathematics, Wiley-Interscience, New York, 1977. ISBN 0-471-02272-1
  • M. Puschnigg, The Kadison–Kaplansky conjecture for word-hyperbolic groups. Invent. Math. 149 (2002), no. 1, 153–194.
  • H. G. Dales and W. H. Woodin, An introduction to independence for analysts, Cambridge 1987


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