Abstract :
Let A be an AH algebra, that is, A is the inductive limit C∗-algebra of
A1
φ1,2 −−→ A2
φ2,3 −−→ A3 −→ ··· −→ An −→···
with An = tn
i=1 Pn,iM[n,i](C(Xn,i))Pn,i, where Xn,i are compact metric spaces, tn and [n, i] are positive
integers, and Pn,i ∈ M[n,i](C(Xn,i )) are projections. Suppose that A has the ideal property: each closed
two-sided ideal of A is generated by the projections inside the ideal, as a closed two-sided ideal. Suppose
that supn,i dim(Xn,i) < +∞. (This condition can be relaxed to a certain condition called very slow dimension
growth.) In this article, we prove that if we further assume that K∗(A) is torsion free, then A is
an approximate circle algebra (or an AT algebra), that is, A can be written as the inductive limit of
B1 −→ B2 −→···−→Bn −→···,where Bn = sn
i=1M{n,i}(C(S1)). One of the main technical results of this article, called the decomposition
theorem, is proved for the general case, i.e., without the assumption that K∗(A) is torsion free. This
decomposition theorem will play an essential role in the proof of a general reduction theorem, where the
condition that K∗(A) is torsion free is dropped, in the subsequent paper Gong et al. (preprint) [31]—of
course, in that case, in addition to space S1, we will also need the spaces TII,k , TIII,k, and S2, as in Gong
(2002) [29].
© 2009 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Keywords :
classification , C?-algebras , Ideal property , AH algebras , AT algebras , Reduction theorem