Friday, 
  January 3, 2014 
  09:00 - 10:00 Paul F. Baum (Penn State)
    The Peter-Weyl-Galois theorem for compact principal bundles
   
    Let G be a compact Hausdorff topological group, and let X be a compact 
      Hausdorff topological space with a given continuous action of G. The talk 
      will prove that the action of G on X is free if and only if the canonical 
      map resulting from viewing an appropriate algebra of functions on X as a 
      comodule algebra over the Hopf algebra of polynomial functions on G is an 
      isomorphism. 
      This is joint work with Piotr M. Hajac and Kenny De Commer.
  
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  10:30 - 11:30 Piotr M. Hajac (Warsaw, Poland)
    Free actions of compact quantum group on unital C*-algebras
   
     Let F be a field, G a finite group, and Map(G,F) the Hopf algebra of all 
      set-theoretic maps G - F. If E is a finite field extension of F and G is 
      its Galois group, the extension is Galois if and only if the canonical map 
      resulting from viewing E as a Map(G,F)-comodule is an isomorphism. Similarly, 
      a finite covering space is regular if and only if the analogous canonical 
      map is an isomorphism. The main result to be presented in this talk is an 
      extension of this point of view to arbitrary actions of compact quantum 
      groups on unital C*-algebras. I will explain that such an action is free 
      (in the sense of Ellwood) if and only if the canonical map (obtained using 
      the underlying Hopf algebra of the compact quantum group) is an isomorphism. 
      In particular, we are able to express the freeness of a compact Hausdorff 
      topological group action on a compact Hausdorff topological space in algebraic 
      terms. Also, we can apply the main result to noncommutative join constructions 
      and coactions of discrete groups on unital C*-algebras. (Joint work with 
      Paul F. Baum and Kenny De Commer.)
  
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  13:30 - 14:30 Jonathan Rosenberg (Maryland)
    Levi-Civita connections for noncommutative tori 
   
     We show how to define Riemannian metrics and connections on a noncommutative 
      torus in such a way that an analogue of Levi-Civita's theorem on the existence 
      and uniqueness of a Riemannian connection holds. The major novelty is that 
      we need to use two different notions of noncommutative vector field. Levi-Civita's 
      theorem makes it possible to define Riemannian curvature using the usual 
      formulas.
  
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  15:00 - 16:00 Mira Peterka (Kansas)
    Stable Rank of the Theta-Deformed Spheres (slides)
   
    We show that any theta-deformed sphere (of arbitrary dimension) has topological 
      stable rank equal to 2 in the case that all deformation parameters are irrational. 
      We also show that the stable rank can exceed 2 if some of the deformation 
      parameters are irrational and others are rational. We compare these results 
      to some related results of T. Sudo. Time permitting, we will go in a different 
      direction and discuss some very preliminary results concerning modules over 
      theta-deformed complex projective spaces.
  
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  Saturday January 4, 2014 
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  09:00 - 10:00 Tomasz Brzezinski (Swansea, Wales) 
     Noncommutativity and resolution: Quantum teardrops and the noncommutative 
    pillow.
   
     We discuss recently studied examples of quantum or noncommutative orbifolds 
      and argue that they provide one with an explicit illustration of noncommutative 
      resolution of singularities. This resolution can be understood on several 
      levels: as separation of roots in polynomial equations defining algebraic 
      varieties; finiteness of the projective dimension in the category of finitely 
      generated bimodules; isomorphism of integral and differential forms; change 
      of the C*-description. On the algebraic level, the key observation is that, 
      when the noncommutativity is introduced, the actions of groups on manifolds 
      by which these spaces are defined become free. In these way deformed orbifolds 
      become bases of quantum (compact) principal bundles. Examples include quantum 
      teardrops, weighted real projective planes and the noncommutative pillow 
      manifold.
  
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  11:00 - 12:00 Albert Sheu (Kansas)
    Quantum lens space as a groupoid C*-algebra
   
    Using the classification of all irreducible *-representations of the quantum 
      lens space obtained by Brzezinski and Fairfax in their study of quantum 
      line bundles over a quantum teardrop, we construct directly a concrete groupoid 
      whose groupoid C*-algebra is the C*-algebraic quantum lens space. This facilitates 
      a way to explicitly identify those quantum line bundles, found by Brzezinski 
      and Fairfax inside the quantum lens space, among the well-classified finitely 
      generated projective modules over the quantum teardrop.
  
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  14:00 - 15:00 Olivier Gabriel (Goettingen, Germany)
    A case study of noncommutative U(1)-principal bundles
   
    We discuss noncommutative U(1)-principal bundles from the topological and 
      cohomological points of view. After reviewing the C*-algebraic setting, 
      we shift attention to Fréchet algebras. Under certain assumptions, 
      we prove a version of the Pimsner-Voiculescu exact sequence for periodic 
      cyclic cohomology. We discuss applications and establish that in the commutative 
      case, our assumptions are satisfied by smooth U(1)-principal bundles.
  
  
    Participant List:
  
  
     
      Paul F. Baum (Penn State University, USA) 
        Tomasz Brzezinski (University of Swansea, Wales) 
        George Elliott (University of Toronto, Canada) 
        Olivier Gabriel (University of Gottingen, Germany) 
        Piotr M. Hajac (University of Warsaw and IMPAN, Poland)  
        Byung-Jay Kahng (Canisius College, USA)  
        Mira Peterka (University of Kansas, USA)  
        Jonathan Rosenberg (University of Maryland, USA)  
        Albert Sheu (University of Kansas, USA) 
        Karen Strung (University of Munster, Germany) | 
    
  
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