Infinite conjugacy class property

In mathematics, a group is said to have the infinite conjugacy class property, or to be an ICC group, if the conjugacy class of every group element but the identity is infinite.[1]

The von Neumann group algebra of a group is a factor if and only if the group has the infinite conjugacy class property. It will then be, provided the group is nontrivial, of type II1, i.e. it will possess a unique, faithful, tracial state.[2]

Examples of ICC groups are the group of permutations of an infinite set that leave all but a finite subset of elements fixed,[3] and free groups on two generators.[3]

In abelian groups, every conjugacy class consists of only one element, so ICC groups are, in a way, as far from being abelian as possible.

References

  1. Palmer, Theodore W. (2001), Banach Algebras and the General Theory of *-Algebras, Volume 2, Encyclopedia of mathematics and its applications, 79, Cambridge University Press, p. 907, ISBN 9780521366380.
  2. Popa, Sorin (2007), "Deformation and rigidity for group actions and von Neumann algebras", International Congress of Mathematicians. Vol. I (PDF), Eur. Math. Soc., Zürich, pp. 445–477, doi:10.4171/022-1/18, ISBN 978-3-03719-022-7, MR 2334200. See in particular p. 450: "LΓ is a II1 factor iff Γ is ICC".
  3. Palmer (2001), p. 908.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.