Mon, 15 Jun 2026
13:30
C1

TBA

Max Ryder
((Mathematical Institute University of Oxford))
Abstract

TBA

Mon, 08 Jun 2026
13:30
C1

TBA

Brian Chan
((Mathematical Institute University of Oxford))
Abstract

TBA

Mon, 01 Jun 2026
13:30
C1

TBA

Randy Pham
((Mathematical Institute University of Oxford))
Abstract

TBA

Mon, 25 May 2026
13:30
C1

TBA

Josep Fontana McNally
((Mathematical Institute University of Oxford))
Abstract

TBA

Mon, 18 May 2026
13:30
C1

Single generation of C*-algebras

Jakub Curda
((Mathematical Institute University of Oxford))
Abstract

One of the problems posed by Kadison in 1967 asks whether every separably acting von Neumann algebra is generated by a single element. The problem remains open in its full generality but significant progress has been made since. One can of course ask the same question in the C*-algebraic setting where, however, counterexamples are abundant even among commutative C*-algebras. I will give an overview of the history of the problem and then discuss some recent results on single generation of C*-algebras associated to graphs and C*-algebras with Cartan subalgebras.

Mon, 11 May 2026
13:30
C1

Boundary maps on group C*-algebras

Joseph Gondek
((Mathematical Institute University of Oxford))
Abstract
Boundary actions of groups (in the sense of Furstenberg) were brought to the attention of operator algebraists in 2014 through the theorem of Kalantar and Kennedy, which asserts that the reduced C*-algebra of a discrete group is simple if and only if the group admits a topologically free boundary action. This talk will advertise the study of an important class of maps defined on G-C*-algebras, called boundary maps, by using them to efficiently prove the Kalantar-Kennedy theorem. We will end with a discussion of more recent results.

 
Mon, 04 May 2026
13:30
C1

Almost-homomorphisms on C*-algebras

Jenny Pi
((Mathematical Institute University of Oxford))
Abstract

We consider the question of whether almost-homomorphisms are close to honest homomorphisms. I’ll survey a few historical results, with different source/target collections of algebras, and also consider what to take as the definition of “almost-homomorphisms”. If we end up having time, I will sketch an elementary proof that almost-characters from commutative C*-algebras are close to honest characters.

Mon, 27 Apr 2026
13:30
C1

The Descriptive Set Theory of C*-Algebraic Functors and the Kasparov Product

Austin Shiner
((Mathematical Institute University of Oxford))
Abstract

Descriptive set theory provides a useful framework for studying the complexity of classification problems in operator algebras. In this talk I will discuss how C*-algebras can be encoded as points in a Borel space, and introduce several equivalent parametrizations, including a new one in terms of ideals of a universal C*-algebra. I will then discuss examples of natural classes of C*-algebras that form Borel sets, as well as a parametrization of *-homomorphisms and recent results on the Borelness of certain functors. Time permitting, I will introduce KK-theory and the Kasparov product, and explain a new result showing that the Kasparov product is Borel in a certain appropriate parametrized setting.

Tue, 10 Mar 2026

12:00 - 13:00
C1

Cone types of generalised triangle groups

Ana Isaković
(University of Cambridge CMS)
Abstract
In this talk, I will introduce a class of groups called generalised triangle groups. These groups were originally defined by Stallings, and later studied by Caprace, Conder, Kaluba, and Witzel as candidates for non-residually finite hyperbolic groups. Generalised triangle groups have corresponding CW complexes, which allow us to study the groups using combinatorial and geometric techniques. I will demonstrate this by examining cone types for non-positively curved k-fold triangle groups.


 

Thu, 12 Mar 2026
11:00
C1

Some remarks on definable complex analysis

Alex Wilkie
(Oxford University)
Abstract
Peterzil and Starchenko began this by developing the basics of complex analysis (Cauchy’s theorem, Taylor series, residues…) within an arbitrary o-minimal expansion of a real closed field. I look at more advanced topics from such a definable viewpoint (eg the Riemann Mapping Theorem) although to make any progress I have to restrict myself to (o-minimal) expansions of the real field itself. I am, of course, motivated by Zilber’s quasiminimality conjecture.
Subscribe to C1