;

Vol. 167, No. 3, 2008

Download This Article
Download this article. For Screen
For Printing
Recent Issues
Vol. 170: 1   2   3
Vol. 169: 1   2   3
Vol. 168: 1   2   3
Vol. 167: 1   2   3
Vol. 166: 1   2   3
Vol. 165: 1   2   3
Vol. 164: 1   2   3
Vol. 163: 1   2   3
Vol. 162: 1   2   3
Vol. 161: 1   2   3
Vol. 160: 1   2   3
Vol. 159: 1   2   3
Vol. 158: 1   2   3
Vol. 157: 1   2   3
Vol. 1–156 at JSTOR
The Journal
Cover
Editorial Board
Editors' Statements
About the Journal
Submission Guidelines
Subscriptions
How to best view
Test your IP address
Related Links
Contact Us
Coming Soon

Andrew S. Toms

Vol. 167 (2008), No. 3, 1029-1044
Abstract

We exhibit a counterexample to Elliott’s classification conjecture for simple, separable, and nuclear C*-algebras whose construction is elementary, and demonstrate the necessity of extremely fine invariants in distinguishing both approximate unitary equivalence classes of automorphisms of such algebras and isomorphism classes of the algebras themselves. The consequences for the program to classify nuclear C*-algebras are far-reaching: one has, among other things, that existing results on the classification of simple, unital AH algebras via the Elliott invariant of K-theoretic data are the best possible, and that these cannot be improved by the addition of continuous homotopy invariant functors to the Elliott invariant.

Mathematical Subject Classification

Primary: 46L35, 46L80

Authors
Andrew S. Toms
York University
Department of Mathematics
North York (Northwood Park / York University) ON M3J 1P3
Canada