Abstract
The answer to this question is simply that new measurements need
new numerical systems and old numerical systems are not adequate
as seen by the history of the development of the numerical systems,
from Natural numbers to Integer numbers to Rational numbers to
Real numbers to Complex numbers to Vectorial numbers. Thus new
measurements of microscopic systems forced Heisenberg to reinvent
the new numerical systems of matrices in which each new number
was an infinite square table of complex numbers or equivalently linear
operators on Hilbert space.
By the work of Von Neumann and others, the theory of operator
algebras became a rich theory, so mathematicians like A. Connes
began to use it as a powerful tool in mathematics.
The program of noncommutative geometry, like algebraic geometry
and topology is to study a space through an algebraic structure which
one assigns to the space very naturally, but this time the algebra is
noncommutative and carries a topological and ordering structure that
is an operator algebra.
In this lecture we try to investigate some examples of spaces for
which the classical tools of analysis like topologies, measures, met-
rics, calculi will give poor results but new tools of noncommutative
geometry will give good results.
Information:
Date: | Wednesday, May 9, 2007, 14:00-16:00 |
Place: | Niavaran Bldg., Niavaran Square, Tehran, Iran |
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