Equilibrium states and growth of quasi-lattice ordered monoids

Date

2019

Authors

Bruce, C.
Laca, M.
Ramagge, J.
Sims, A.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society, 2019; 147(6):2389-2404

Statement of Responsibility

Conference Name

Abstract

Each multiplicative real-valued homomorphism on a quasi-lattice ordered monoid gives rise to a quasi-periodic dynamics on the associated Toeplitz C*-algebra; here we study the KMS equilibrium states of the resulting C*-dynamical system. We show that under a nondegeneracy assumption on the homomorphism there is a critical inverse temperature βcsuch that at each inverse temperature β ≥ βcthere exists a unique KMS state. Strictly above βc, the KMS states are generalised Gibbs states with density operators determined by analytic extension to the upper half-plane of the unitaries implementing the dynamics. These are faithful Type I states. The critical value βcis the largest real pole of the partition function of the system and is related to the clique polynomial and sKew-growth function of the monoid, relative to the degree map given by the logarithm of the multiplicative homomorphism. Motivated by the study of equilibrium states, we give a proof of the inversion formula for the growth series of a quasi-lattice ordered monoid in terms of the clique polynomial as in recent worK of Albenque–Nadeau and McMullen for the finitely generated case and in terms of the sKew-growth series as in recent worK of Saito. Specifically, we show that e−βc is the smallest pole of the growth series and thus is the smallest positive real root of the clique polynomial. We use this to show that equilibrium states in the subcritical range can only occur at inverse temperatures that correspond to roots of the clique polynomial in the interval (e−βc, 1), but we are not aware of any examples in which such roots exist.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Access Status

Rights

Copyright 2019 American Mathematical Society.

License

Grant ID

Call number

Persistent link to this record