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BaumConnes conjecture 1/2 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BaumConnes_conjecture reference science, encyclopedia 2026-05-05T11:02:45.104924+00:00 kb-cron

In mathematics, specifically in operator K-theory, the BaumConnes conjecture suggests a link between the K-theory of the reduced C*-algebra of a group and the K-homology of the classifying space of proper actions of that group. The conjecture sets up a correspondence between different areas of mathematics, with the K-homology of the classifying space being related to geometry, differential operator theory, and homotopy theory, while the K-theory of the group's reduced C*-algebra is a purely analytical object. The conjecture, if true, would have some older famous conjectures as consequences. For instance, the surjectivity part implies the KadisonKaplansky conjecture for discrete torsion-free groups, and the injectivity is closely related to the Novikov conjecture. The conjecture is also closely related to index theory, as the assembly map

    μ
  

{\displaystyle \mu }

is a sort of index, and it plays a major role in Alain Connes' noncommutative geometry program. The origins of the conjecture go back to Fredholm theory, the AtiyahSinger index theorem and the interplay of geometry with operator K-theory as expressed in the works of Brown, Douglas and Fillmore, among many other motivating subjects.

== Formulation == Let Γ be a second countable locally compact group (for instance a countable discrete group). One can define a morphism

    μ
    :
    R
    
      K
      
        
      
      
        Γ
      
    
    (
    
      
        
          E
          Γ
        
        _
      
    
    )
    →
    
      K
      
        
      
    
    (
    
      C
      
        r
      
      
        
      
    
    (
    Γ
    )
    )
    ,
  

{\displaystyle \mu :RK_{*}^{\Gamma }({\underline {E\Gamma }})\to K_{*}(C_{r}^{*}(\Gamma )),}

called the assembly map, from the equivariant K-homology with

    Γ
  

{\displaystyle \Gamma }

-compact supports of the classifying space of proper actions

          E
          Γ
        
        _
      
    
  

{\displaystyle {\underline {E\Gamma }}}

to the K-theory of the reduced C*-algebra of Γ. The subscript index * can be 0 or 1. Paul Baum and Alain Connes introduced the following conjecture (1982) about this morphism:

Baum-Connes Conjecture. The assembly map

    μ
  

{\displaystyle \mu }

is an isomorphism. As the left hand side tends to be more easily accessible than the right hand side, because there are hardly any general structure theorems of the

      C
      
        
      
    
  

{\displaystyle C^{*}}

-algebra, one usually views the conjecture as an "explanation" of the right hand side. The original formulation of the conjecture was somewhat different, as the notion of equivariant K-homology was not yet common in 1982. In case

    Γ
  

{\displaystyle \Gamma }

is discrete and torsion-free, the left hand side reduces to the non-equivariant K-homology with compact supports of the ordinary classifying space

    B
    Γ
  

{\displaystyle B\Gamma }

of

    Γ
  

{\displaystyle \Gamma }

. There is also more general form of the conjecture, known as BaumConnes conjecture with coefficients, where both sides have coefficients in the form of a

      C
      
        
      
    
  

{\displaystyle C^{*}}

-algebra

    A
  

{\displaystyle A}

on which

    Γ
  

{\displaystyle \Gamma }

acts by

      C
      
        
      
    
  

{\displaystyle C^{*}}

-automorphisms. It says in KK-language that the assembly map

      μ
      
        A
        ,
        Γ
      
    
    :
    R
    K
    
      K
      
        
      
      
        Γ
      
    
    (
    
      
        
          E
          Γ
        
        _
      
    
    ,
    A
    )
    →
    
      K
      
        
      
    
    (
    A
    
      ⋊
      
        λ
      
    
    Γ
    )
    ,
  

{\displaystyle \mu _{A,\Gamma }:RKK_{*}^{\Gamma }({\underline {E\Gamma }},A)\to K_{*}(A\rtimes _{\lambda }\Gamma ),}

is an isomorphism, containing the case without coefficients as the case

    A
    =
    
      C
    
    .
  

{\displaystyle A=\mathbb {C} .}

However, counterexamples to the conjecture with coefficients were found in 2002 by Nigel Higson, Vincent Lafforgue and Georges Skandalis. However, the conjecture with coefficients remains an active area of research, since it is, not unlike the classical conjecture, often seen as a statement concerning particular groups or class of groups.

== Examples == Let

    Γ
  

{\displaystyle \Gamma }

be the integers

      Z
    
  

{\displaystyle \mathbb {Z} }

. Then the left hand side is the K-homology of

    B
    
      Z
    
  

{\displaystyle B\mathbb {Z} }

which is the circle. The

      C
      
        
      
    
  

{\displaystyle C^{*}}

-algebra of the integers is by the commutative GelfandNaimark transform, which reduces to the Fourier transform in this case, isomorphic to the algebra of continuous functions on the circle. So the right hand side is the topological K-theory of the circle. One can then show that the assembly map is KK-theoretic Poincaré duality as defined by Gennadi Kasparov, which is an isomorphism.

== Results == The conjecture without coefficients is still open, although the field has received great attention since 1982. The conjecture is proved for the following classes of groups: