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arxiv: 2509.24106 · v3 · pith:VKJYXDMInew · submitted 2025-09-28 · 🧮 math.FA · math.DS· math.OA

Twisted crossed products of Banach algebras

Pith reviewed 2026-05-21 22:24 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.FA math.DSmath.OA
keywords twisted crossed productsBanach algebrasL^p-operator algebrasPacker-Raeburn tricktwisted actionscontractive representationsuniversal property
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The pith

Contractive representations equip twisted crossed products of Banach algebras with a Banach algebra structure and isometric universal property, and L^p versions are stably isomorphic to untwisted ones.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper introduces the twisted crossed product F_R(G,A,α,σ) built from a locally compact group G, a nondegenerate Banach algebra A with contractive approximate identity, a twisted action (α,σ), and a family R of uniformly bounded representations of A. When every representation in R is contractive, the resulting object becomes a Banach algebra that carries a contractive approximate identity and satisfies an isometric universal property for covariant representations. The authors then specialize the construction to L^p-operator algebras, define both full and reduced L^p-twisted crossed products, and prove that every L^p-twisted crossed product is stably isometrically isomorphic to an untwisted crossed product, extending the classical Packer-Raeburn trick to this setting.

Core claim

The central claim is that the twisted crossed product F_R(G,A,α,σ) is a Banach algebra with a contractive approximate identity precisely when R consists of contractive representations of A, and that this algebra is characterized by an isometric universal property. In the L^p-operator algebra setting the same construction yields L^p-twisted crossed products that are stably isometrically isomorphic to ordinary untwisted crossed products.

What carries the argument

The twisted crossed product F_R(G,A,α,σ), formed by integrating the twisted action (α,σ) of G on A against the family R of representations of A.

If this is right

  • The universal property supplies a concrete way to recognize covariant representations of the twisted system inside the new algebra.
  • The contractive approximate identity permits the formation of multiplier algebras and the study of approximate units in the crossed-product setting.
  • The stable isomorphism reduces many questions about L^p-twisted crossed products to the corresponding untwisted L^p-crossed products.
  • Reduced and full versions of the L^p-twisted crossed product can be defined by restricting R to the appropriate classes of representations.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The construction may allow results known for ordinary L^p-crossed products to be transferred directly to the twisted case via the stable isomorphism.
  • Similar universal-property arguments could be applied to other classes of representations beyond the contractive ones considered here.
  • The approach might extend to twisted actions on operator spaces or on algebras without approximate identities by relaxing the contractivity hypotheses in a controlled way.

Load-bearing premise

The family R consists of contractive representations, A is nondegenerate and possesses a contractive approximate identity, and (α,σ) is a genuine twisted action of the locally compact group G on A.

What would settle it

An explicit example of a family R of uniformly bounded but non-contractive representations for which the integrated form F_R fails to satisfy the Banach algebra norm inequality, or a concrete L^p-twisted crossed product that is not stably isometrically isomorphic to any untwisted crossed product.

read the original abstract

Given a locally compact group $G$, a nondegenerate Banach algebra $A$ with a contractive approximate identity, a twisted action $(\alpha, \sigma)$ of $G$ on $A$, and a family $\mathcal{R}$ of uniformly bounded representations of $A$ on Banach spaces, we define the twisted crossed product $F_\mathcal{R}(G,A,\alpha, \sigma)$. When $\mathcal{R}$ consists of contractive representations, we show that $F_\mathcal{R}(G,A,\alpha, \sigma)$ is a Banach algebra with a contractive approximate identity, which can also be characterized by an isometric universal property. As an application, we specialize to the $L^p$-operator algebra setting, defining both the $L^p$-twisted crossed product and the reduced version. Finally, we give a generalization of the so-called Packer-Raeburn trick to the $L^p$-setting, showing that any $L^p$-twisted crossed product is "stably" isometrically isomorphic to an untwisted one.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 3 minor

Summary. The paper defines the twisted crossed product F_R(G,A,α,σ) for a locally compact group G, nondegenerate Banach algebra A with contractive approximate identity, twisted action (α,σ), and family R of uniformly bounded representations of A. When R consists of contractive representations, F_R is shown to be a Banach algebra with contractive approximate identity that satisfies an isometric universal property for covariant representations. Specializing to L^p-operator algebras yields definitions of L^p-twisted crossed products and their reduced forms; a generalization of the Packer-Raeburn construction then establishes that every L^p-twisted crossed product is stably isometrically isomorphic to an untwisted crossed product.

Significance. If the derivations hold, the work supplies a flexible, representation-theoretic construction of Banach algebras from twisted actions that extends classical crossed-product theory to general Banach algebras and to the L^p-operator algebra setting. The isometric universal property and the stable isomorphism result are concrete tools that could simplify the analysis of representations, ideals, and invariants in these algebras. The paper gives explicit norm estimates and direct verifications under the stated hypotheses, together with a clean application that reduces twisted L^p-crossed products to untwisted ones.

major comments (2)
  1. [§3.2] §3.2, after Definition 3.4: the submultiplicativity estimate for the twisted convolution product on the dense subspace of compactly supported functions relies on the contractivity of representations in R and the cocycle identity for σ; the argument is sketched but the precise passage from the pointwise product to the integrated norm bound (involving the uniform bound of R) is not written out in full detail, which is load-bearing for the claim that the completion is a Banach algebra.
  2. [Theorem 5.7] Theorem 5.7 (generalized Packer-Raeburn): the statement that the L^p-twisted crossed product is 'stably' isometrically isomorphic to an untwisted one requires an explicit description of the stabilizing algebra (e.g., whether it is the compact operators on L^p or a matrix algebra over it) and a verification that the isomorphism preserves the reduced norm; this step is central to the application but the current write-up leaves the precise stable isomorphism implicit.
minor comments (3)
  1. [Abstract] The abstract introduces the notation F_R without a preliminary sentence locating it; a one-line definition in the abstract would improve readability.
  2. [§5] Notation for the reduced L^p-crossed product is introduced in §5 but never contrasted typographically with the full version; a consistent subscript (e.g., r) would prevent confusion.
  3. [Introduction] Several references to the classical Packer-Raeburn trick cite only the original C*-paper; adding a sentence recalling the precise statement in the C*-setting would help readers unfamiliar with that literature.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful reading of the manuscript and the constructive comments. We address each major comment below and will incorporate the suggested clarifications in the revised version.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [§3.2] §3.2, after Definition 3.4: the submultiplicativity estimate for the twisted convolution product on the dense subspace of compactly supported functions relies on the contractivity of representations in R and the cocycle identity for σ; the argument is sketched but the precise passage from the pointwise product to the integrated norm bound (involving the uniform bound of R) is not written out in full detail, which is load-bearing for the claim that the completion is a Banach algebra.

    Authors: We agree that the submultiplicativity estimate would benefit from a more explicit write-up. In the revised manuscript we will expand the argument after Definition 3.4 to detail the passage from the pointwise product, via the cocycle identity for σ and the contractivity of the representations in R, to the integrated norm bound that uses the uniform bound of R. revision: yes

  2. Referee: [Theorem 5.7] Theorem 5.7 (generalized Packer-Raeburn): the statement that the L^p-twisted crossed product is 'stably' isometrically isomorphic to an untwisted one requires an explicit description of the stabilizing algebra (e.g., whether it is the compact operators on L^p or a matrix algebra over it) and a verification that the isomorphism preserves the reduced norm; this step is central to the application but the current write-up leaves the precise stable isomorphism implicit.

    Authors: We accept that the stable isomorphism in Theorem 5.7 is presented somewhat implicitly. In the revision we will explicitly identify the stabilizing algebra (as the compact operators on an appropriate L^p-space or a matrix algebra over it) and supply a direct verification that the isomorphism preserves the reduced norm. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity

full rationale

The paper introduces the twisted crossed product F_R(G,A,α,σ) by explicit definition as a suitable completion of compactly supported continuous functions equipped with a twisted convolution product, then directly verifies the Banach algebra property, contractive approximate identity, and isometric universal property from the uniform boundedness/contractivity of representations in R, nondegeneracy and contractive approximate identity of A, and the standard cocycle axioms for the twisted action. These verifications consist of norm estimates and algebraic checks on the dense subspace that do not reduce to fitted parameters, self-referential definitions, or load-bearing self-citations. The L^p specialization and generalized Packer-Raeburn isomorphism are likewise obtained by explicit constructions and the same estimates, rendering the derivation self-contained against the stated hypotheses.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 3 axioms · 1 invented entities

The central claims rest on standard background assumptions about Banach algebras, locally compact groups, and twisted actions; the only invented entity is the newly defined crossed-product algebra itself.

axioms (3)
  • domain assumption A is a nondegenerate Banach algebra possessing a contractive approximate identity
    Stated as given in the opening sentence of the abstract.
  • domain assumption G is a locally compact group and (α,σ) is a twisted action of G on A
    Standard setup for crossed-product constructions; invoked throughout the abstract.
  • domain assumption R is a family of uniformly bounded representations of A on Banach spaces
    Required for the definition of F_R; contractivity is added for the algebra property.
invented entities (1)
  • F_R(G,A,α,σ) no independent evidence
    purpose: The twisted crossed product Banach algebra
    Newly defined object whose properties are proved in the paper.

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