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This book collects the notes of the lectures given at an Advanced
Course on Dynamical Systems at the Centre de Recerca Matematica
(CRM) in Barcelona. The notes consist of four series of lectures.
The first one, given by Andrew Toms, presents the basic properties
of the Cuntz semigroup and its role in the classification program
of simple, nuclear, separable C*-algebras. The second series of
lectures, delivered by N. Christopher Phillips, serves as an
introduction to group actions on C*-algebras and their crossed
products, with emphasis on the simple case and when the crossed
products are classifiable. The third one, given by David Kerr,
treats various developments related to measure-theoretic and
topological aspects of crossed products, focusing on internal and
external approximation concepts, both for groups and C*-algebras.
Finally, the last series of lectures, delivered by Thierry
Giordano, is devoted to the theory of topological orbit
equivalence, with particular attention to the classification of
minimal actions by finitely generated abelian groups on the Cantor
set.
Freeness of an action of a compact Lie group on a compact Hausdorff
space is equivalent to a simple condition on the corresponding
equivariant K-theory. This fact can be regarded as a theorem on
actions on a commutative C*-algebra, namely the algebra of
continuous complex-valued functions on the space. The successes of
"noncommutative topology" suggest that one should try to generalize
this result to actions on arbitrary C*-algebras. Lacking an
appropriate definition of a free action on a C*-algebra, one is led
instead to the study of actions satisfying conditions on
equivariant K-theory - in the cases of spaces, simply freeness. The
first third of this book is a detailed exposition of equivariant
K-theory and KK-theory, assuming only a general knowledge of
C*-algebras and some ordinary K-theory. It continues with the
author's research on K-theoretic freeness of actions. It is shown
that many properties of freeness generalize, while others do not,
and that certain forms of K-theoretic freeness are related to other
noncommutative measures of freeness, such as the Connes spectrum.
The implications of K-theoretic freeness for actions on type I and
AF algebras are also examined, and in these cases K-theoretic
freeness is characterized analytically.
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