234 research outputs found
A computational approach to the Thompson group
Let denote the Thompson group with standard generators , .
It is a long standing open problem whether is an amenable group. By a
result of Kesten from 1959, amenability of is equivalent to and to where in both
cases the norm of an element in the group ring is computed in
via the regular representation of . By extensive numerical
computations, we obtain precise lower bounds for the norms in and ,
as well as good estimates of the spectral distributions of
and of with respect to the tracial state on the
group von Neumann Algebra . Our computational results suggest, that
It is
however hard to obtain precise upper bounds for the norms, and our methods
cannot be used to prove non-amenability of .Comment: appears in International Journal of Algebra and Computation (2015
Exotic subfactors of finite depth with Jones indices (5+sqrt{13})/2 and (5+sqrt{17})/2
We prove existence of subfactors of finite depth of the hyperfinite II_1
factor with indices (5+sqrt{13})/2= 4.302... and (5+sqrt{17})/2=4.561.... The
existence of the former was announced by the second named author in 1993 and
that of the latter has been conjectured since then. These are the only known
subfactors with finite depth which do not arise from classical groups, quantum
groups or rational conformal field theory.Comment: 70 pages, Latex, using epic.sty, eepic.sty, epsf.sty, here.st
Explicit lower and upper bounds on the entangled value of multiplayer XOR games
XOR games are the simplest model in which the nonlocal properties of
entanglement manifest themselves. When there are two players, it is well known
that the bias --- the maximum advantage over random play --- of entangled
players can be at most a constant times greater than that of classical players.
Recently, P\'{e}rez-Garc\'{i}a et al. [Comm. Math. Phys. 279 (2), 2008] showed
that no such bound holds when there are three or more players: the advantage of
entangled players over classical players can become unbounded, and scale with
the number of questions in the game. Their proof relies on non-trivial results
from operator space theory, and gives a non-explicit existence proof, leading
to a game with a very large number of questions and only a loose control over
the local dimension of the players' shared entanglement.
We give a new, simple and explicit (though still probabilistic) construction
of a family of three-player XOR games which achieve a large quantum-classical
gap (QC-gap). This QC-gap is exponentially larger than the one given by
P\'{e}rez-Garc\'{i}a et. al. in terms of the size of the game, achieving a
QC-gap of order with questions per player. In terms of the
dimension of the entangled state required, we achieve the same (optimal) QC-gap
of for a state of local dimension per player. Moreover, the
optimal entangled strategy is very simple, involving observables defined by
tensor products of the Pauli matrices.
Additionally, we give the first upper bound on the maximal QC-gap in terms of
the number of questions per player, showing that our construction is only
quadratically off in that respect. Our results rely on probabilistic estimates
on the norm of random matrices and higher-order tensors which may be of
independent interest.Comment: Major improvements in presentation; results identica
Monotone graph limits and quasimonotone graphs
The recent theory of graph limits gives a powerful framework for
understanding the properties of suitable (convergent) sequences of
graphs in terms of a limiting object which may be represented by a symmetric
function on , i.e., a kernel or graphon. In this context it is
natural to wish to relate specific properties of the sequence to specific
properties of the kernel. Here we show that the kernel is monotone (i.e.,
increasing in both variables) if and only if the sequence satisfies a
`quasi-monotonicity' property defined by a certain functional tending to zero.
As a tool we prove an inequality relating the cut and norms of kernels of
the form with and monotone that may be of interest in its
own right; no such inequality holds for general kernels.Comment: 38 page
A new look at C*-simplicity and the unique trace property of a group
We characterize when the reduced C*-algebra of a group has unique tracial
state, respectively, is simple, in terms of Dixmier-type properties of the
group C*-algebra. We also give a simple proof of the recent result by
Breuillard, Kalantar, Kennedy and Ozawa that the reduced C*-algebra of a group
has unique tracial state if and only if the amenable radical of the group is
trivial.Comment: 8 page
Mutually unbiased bases in dimension six: The four most distant bases
We consider the average distance between four bases in dimension six. The
distance between two orthonormal bases vanishes when the bases are the same,
and the distance reaches its maximal value of unity when the bases are
unbiased. We perform a numerical search for the maximum average distance and
find it to be strictly smaller than unity. This is strong evidence that no four
mutually unbiased bases exist in dimension six. We also provide a two-parameter
family of three bases which, together with the canonical basis, reach the
numerically-found maximum of the average distance, and we conduct a detailed
study of the structure of the extremal set of bases.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, 1 tabl
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