Every primitive ideal of a C*-algebra is closed and prime. A long-standing problem of Dixmier asked whether the converse holds, and this was settled by Weaver in 2003, when he gave the first example [1] of a prime C*-algebra that is not primitive. Between primitive ideals and closed prime ideals lies the class of factor ideals, and Weaver’s example also shows that there exist closed prime ideals that are not factor ideals. This leads to the following question:
Is every factor ideal in a C*-algebra primitive?
Background/Motivation: Given a C*-algebra
, a factor representation is a representation
such that the generated von Neumann algebra
is a factor, that is,
. One can further distinguish the type of the factor. In particular, an irreducible representation is a type I factor representation. A (two-sided) ideal
is:
- primitive if
for some irreducible representation
; - factor if
for some factor representation
; - prime if for any ideals
with
we have
or
.
Since irreducible representations are factor representations, we see that every primitive ideal is a factor ideal. Let us see that every factor ideal is a closed prime ideal.
First, if
are nonzero projections in a factor
, then
. Indeed, projections in a factor are totally ordered with respect to Murray–von Neumann subequivalence, so we may assume that
. Then there exists
such that
and
, which implies that
. Next, if
are nonzereo elements in a factor
, then using Borel functional calculus for
we can find
such that
is a nonzero projection, and similarly there is
such that
is a nonzero projection. It follows that
.
Now let
be a factor ideal, that is,
for a representation
such that
is a factor, and let
be ideals with
. Then
, which implies that
. Then
or
, and so
or
, showing that
is a prime ideal.
Letting
,
and
denote the set of primitive, of factor, and of closed prime ideals of
, respectively, we thus have the following inclusions:
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There are three important cases in which closed prime ideals are automatically primitive, and hence
.
Separable C*-algebras. Dixmier [2] showed that every closed prime ideal of a separable C*-algebra is primitive, see also Corollary II.6.5.15 in [3]. To see this, let
be a separable C*-algebras, and let
. Passing to the quotient
, we may assume that
is prime (i.e.
is a prime ideal) and we need to show that
is primitive (i.e. admits a faithful, irreducible representation). We consider the primitive ideal space
equipped with the hull-kernel topology, that is, a subset
is closed if and only if
for some closed ideal
(namely
). Then
is irreducible in the sense that if
are closed subsets with
, then
or
. Indeed, the closed ideals
and
satisfy
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Now let
be a nonempty open subset. Then
is dense, since
and
, hence
. In general, the primitive ideal space of a C*-algebra is a Baire space (the intersection of a countable family of dense open sets is dense). Now, if
is separable, then
is second-countable. Let
be a basis of nonempty open subsets of
. Using that
is a Baire space, the intersection
is dense in
, and in particular it is not empty. Pick
, which is a primitive ideal of
. Then
is contained in every nonempty open subset of
, and hence
is dense in
. Then
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Von Neumann algebras. Every closed prime ideal in a von Neumann algebra (and more generally, in every AW*-algebra) is primitive. To see this, let
be a closed, prime ideal in an AW*-algebra
. Let
denote the center and consider
. Then
is a closed, prime ideal of
. Since closed, prime ideals in commutative C*-algebras are maximal, it follows that
is a maximal ideal of
. Using that
belongs to the center and applying Cohen’s factorization theorem, it follows that the closed ideal of
generated by
is equal to
. Then the quotient
is an AW* factor, and we have
. It was shown in Theorem 6 in [4] that the closed ideals of an AW* factor are well-ordered by inclusion. Since every closed ideal of a C*-algebra is an intersection of primitive ideals, it follows that every (proper) closed ideal of an AW* factor is primitive (see Corollary 7 in [4]). In particular, the (proper) closed ideal
of
is primitive, and it follows that
is a primitive ideal of
.
Type I C*-algebras. Kaplansky showed in Lemma 7.4 in [5] that every prime C*-algebra of type I is primitive. Since type I passes to quotients, we get that closed prime ideals in type I C*-algebras are primitive.
A C*-algebra has type I if and only if its bidual
is a type I von Neumann algebra. Further, a C*-algebra is type I if and only if every of its factor representations is type I. Thus, a C*-algebra is not type I if and only if it has factor representations of type II or type III. Sakai showed that type III is always realized, that is, a C*-algebra is not type I if and only if it has a factor representation of type III. See IV.1.1.3 and IV.1.5.8 in [3]. For separable C*-algebras, the analog for type II is also known: A separable C*-algebra is not of type I if and only if it admits a factor representation of type II. The nonseparable case seems to be still open:
Does every C*-algebra that is not of type I admit a factor representation of type II?
One can further distinguish type
and type
. A non-type I C*-algebra need not have factor representations of type
. For example, simple purely infinite C*-algebras do not admit factor representations of type
, since this would entail the existence of a tracial state. In fact, a unital, simple, non-elementary C*-algebra admits a factor representations of type
if and only it has a tracial state. Simple, purely infinite C*-algebras can have factor representations of type
. For the Calkin algebra, this was shown in [6,7].
[1] Weaver. A prime C*-algebra that is not primitive. J. Funct. Anal. 203 (2003), 356–361.
[2] Dixmier. C*-algebras. North-Holland Math. Library, Vol. 15, 1977.
[3] Blackadar. Operator algebras. Theory of C*-algebras and von Neumann algebras. Encyclopaedia Math. Sci., 122, Springer 2006.
[4] Saitô, Wright. Ideals of factors. Rend. Circ. Mat. Palermo (2) 55 (2006), 360–368.
[5] Kaplansky. The structure of certain operator algebras. Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 70 (1951), 219–255.
[6] Anderson, Bunce. A type II-infty factor representation of the Calkin algebra [Amer. J. Math. 99]
[7] Anderson. Extreme points in sets of positive linear maps on B(H). J. Functional Analysis 31 (1979), 195–217.