*-algebra
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[edit] *-ring
In mathematics, a *-ring is an associative ring with a map * : A → A which is an antiautomorphism, and an involution.
More precisely, * is required to satisfy the following properties:
- (x + y) * = x * + y *
- (xy) * = y * x *
- 1 * = 1
- (x * ) * = x
for all x,y in A.
This is also called an involutive ring, involutory ring, and ring with involution.
Elements such that x * = x are called self-adjoint or Hermitian.
One can define a sesquilinear form over any *-ring.
[edit] *-algebra
A *-algebra A is a *-ring that is an associative algebra over another *-ring R, with the * agreeing on .
The base *-ring is usually the complex numbers (with * acting as complex conjugation).
Since R is central, the * on A is conjugate-linear in R, meaning
- (λx + μy) * = λ * x * + μ * y *
for , . Proof:
- (λx + μy) * = x * λ * + y * μ * = λ * x * + μ * y *
A *-homomorphism is algebra homomorphism that is compatible with the involutions of A and B, i.e.,
- f(a * ) = f(a) * for all a in A.
[edit] Examples
- The most familiar example of a *-algebra is the field of complex numbers C where * is just complex conjugation.
- More generally, the conjugation involution in any Cayley-Dickson algebra such as the complex numbers, quaternions and octonions.
- Another example is the algebra of n×n matrices over C with * given by the conjugate transpose.
- Its generalization, the Hermitian adjoint of a linear operator on a Hilbert space is also a star-algebra.
- In Hecke algebra, an involution is important to the Kazhdan–Lusztig polynomial.
- Any commutative ring becomes a *-ring with the trivial involution.
Involutive Hopf algebras are important examples of *-algebras (with the additional structure of a compatible comultiplication); the most familiar example being:
- The group Hopf algebra: a group ring, with involution given by
[edit] Additional structures
Many properties of the transpose hold for general *-algebras:
- The Hermitian elements form a Jordan algebra;
- The skew Hermitian elements form a Lie algebra;
- If 2 is invertible, then and are orthogonal idempotents, called symmetrizing and anti-symmetrizing, so the algebra decomposes as a direct sum of symmetric and anti-symmetric (Hermitian and skew Hermitian) elements. This decomposition is as a vector space, not as an algebra, because the idempotents are operators, not elements of the algebra.
[edit] Skew structures
Given a *-ring, there is also the map . This is not a *-ring structure (unless the characteristic is 2, in which case it's identical to the original *), as (so * is not a ring homomorphism), but it satisfies the other axioms (linear, antimultiplicative, involution) and hence is quite similar.
Elements fixed by this map (i.e., such that a * = − a) are called skew Hermitian.
For the complex numbers with complex conjugation, the real numbers are the Hermitian elements, and the imaginary numbers are the skew Hermitian.