Boundaries of reduced C*-algebras of discrete groups
Abstract
For a discrete group G, we consider the minimal C*-subalgebra of ∞(G) that arises as the image of a unital positive G-equivariant projection. This algebra always exists and is unique up to isomorphism. It is trivial if and only if G is amenable. We prove that, more generally, it can be identified with the algebra C(∂F G) of continuous functions on Furstenberg's universal G-boundary ∂F G. This operator-algebraic construction of the Furstenberg boundary has a number of interesting consequences. We prove that G is exact precisely when the G-action on ∂F G is amenable, and use this fact to prove Ozawa's conjecture that if G is exact, then there is an embedding of the reduced C*-algebra Cr*(G) of G into a nuclear C*-algebra which is contained in the injective envelope of Cr*(G). It is a longstanding open problem to determine which groups are C*-simple, in the sense that the algebra Cr*(G) is simple. We prove that this problem can be reformulated as a problem about the structure of the G-action on the Furstenberg boundary. Specifically, we prove that a discrete group G is C*-simple if and only if the G-action on the Furstenberg boundary is topologically free. We apply this result to prove that Tarski monster groups are C*-simple. This provides another solution to a problem of de la Harpe (recently answered by Olshanskii and Osin) about the existence of C*-simple groups with no free subgroups.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.