groupoid and group representations related to quantum symmetries
1 Groupoid representations
Whereas group representations (http://planetmath.org/GroupRepresentation) of quantum unitary operators are extensively employed in standard quantum mechanics, the applications of groupoid representations (http://planetmath.org/RepresentationsOfLocallyCompactGroupoids) are still under development. For example, a description of stochastic quantum mechanics in curved spacetime (Drechsler and Tuckey, 1996) involving a Hilbert bundle is possible in terms of groupoid representations which can indeed be defined on such a Hilbert bundle , but cannot be expressed as the simpler group representations on a Hilbert space . On the other hand, as in the case of group representations, unitary groupoid representations induce associated C*-algebra representations. In the next subsection we recall some of the basic results concerning groupoid representations and their associated groupoid *-algebra representations. For further details and recent results in the mathematical theory of groupoid representations one has also available the succint monograph by Buneci (2003) and references cited therein (www.utgjiu.ro/math/mbuneci/preprint.html).
Let us consider first the relationships between these mainly algebraic concepts and their extended quantum symmetries, also including relevant computation examples; then let us consider several further extensions of symmetry and algebraic topology in the context of local quantum physics/algebraic quantum field theory, symmetry breaking, quantum chromodynamics and the development of novel supersymmetry theories of quantum gravity. In this respect one can also take spacetime ‘inhomogeneity’ as a criterion for the comparisons between physical, partial or local, symmetries: on the one hand, the example of paracrystals reveals thermodynamic disorder (entropy) within its own spacetime framework, whereas in spacetime itself, whatever the selected model, the inhomogeneity arises through (super) gravitational effects. More specifically, in the former case one has the technique of the generalized Fourier–Stieltjes transform (along with convolution and Haar measure), and in view of the latter, we may compare the resulting ‘broken’/paracrystal–type symmetry with that of the supersymmetry predictions for weak gravitational fields (e.g., ‘ghost’ particles) along with the broken supersymmetry in the presence of intense gravitational fields. Another significant extension of quantum symmetries may result from the superoperator algebra/algebroids of Prigogine’s quantum superoperators which are defined only for irreversible, infinite-dimensional systems (Prigogine, 1980).
1.1 Definition of extended quantum groupoid and algebroid symmetries
Quantum groups Representations Weak Hopf algebras Quantum groupoids and algebroids
Our intention here is to view the latter scheme in terms of weak Hopf C*–algebroid– and/or other– extended symmetries, which we propose to do, for example, by incorporating the concepts of rigged Hilbert spaces and sectional functions for a small category. We note, however, that an alternative approach to quantum ‘groupoids’ has already been reported (Maltsiniotis, 1992), (perhaps also related to noncommutative geometry); this was later expressed in terms of deformation-quantization: the Hopf algebroid deformation of the universal enveloping algebras of Lie algebroids (Xu, 1997) as the classical limit of a quantum ‘groupoid’; this also parallels the introduction of quantum ‘groups’ as the deformation-quantization of Lie bialgebras. Furthermore, such a Hopf algebroid approach (Lu, 1996) leads to categories of Hopf algebroid modules (Xu, 1997) which are monoidal, whereas the links between Hopf algebroids and monoidal bicategories were investigated by Day and Street (1997).
As defined under the following heading on groupoids, let
be a locally compact groupoid endowed with a (left) Haar system,
and let be the convolution
–algebra (we append with if necessary, so
that is unital). Then consider such a groupoid
representation
that respects a compatible measure
on (cf Buneci, 2003). On taking a state
on , we assume a parametrization
(1.1) |
Furthermore, each is considered as a rigged Hilbert space Bohm and Gadella (1989), that is, one also has the following nested inclusions:
(1.2) |
in the usual manner, where is a dense subspace of with the appropriate locally convex topology, and is the space of continuous antilinear functionals of . For each , we require to be invariant under and is a continuous representation of on . With these conditions, representations of (proper) quantum groupoids that are derived for weak C*–Hopf algebras (or algebroids) modeled on rigged Hilbert spaces could be suitable generalizations in the framework of a Hamiltonian generated semigroup of time evolution of a quantum system via integration of Schrödinger’s equation as studied in the case of Lie groups (Wickramasekara and Bohm, 2006). The adoption of the rigged Hilbert spaces is also based on how the latter are recognized as reconciling the Dirac and von Neumann approaches to quantum theories (Bohm and Gadella, 1989).
Next, let be a locally compact Hausdorff groupoid and a locally compact Hausdorff space. ( will be called a locally compact groupoid, or lc- groupoid for short). In order to achieve a small C*–category we follow a suggestion of A. Seda (private communication) by using a general principle in the context of Banach bundles (Seda, 1976, 982)). Let be a continuous, open and surjective map. For each , consider the fibre , and set equipped with a uniform norm . Then we set . We form a Banach bundle as follows. Firstly, the projection is defined via the typical fibre . Let denote the continuous complex valued functions on with compact support. We obtain a sectional function defined via restriction as . Commencing from the vector space , the set is dense in . For each , the function is continuous on , and each is a continuous section of . These facts follow from Seda (1982, Theorem 1). Furthermore, under the convolution product , the space forms an associative algebra over (cf. Seda, 1982, Theorem 3).