Hochschild cohomology of von Neumann algebras /
Sinclair, Allan M.,
Hochschild cohomology of von Neumann algebras / Allan M. Sinclair, Roger R. Smith. - Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 1995. - 1 online resource (vii, 196 pages) : digital, PDF file(s). - London Mathematical Society lecture note series ; 203 . - London Mathematical Society lecture note series ; 203. .
Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Oct 2015).
1. Completely Bounded Operators -- 2. Derivations -- 3. Averaging in Continuous and Normal Cohomology -- 4. Completely Bounded Cohomology -- 5. Hyperfinite Subalgebras -- 6. Continuous Cohomology -- 7. Stability of Products -- 8. Appendix.
This is an introductory text intended to give the non-specialist a comprehensive insight into the science of biotransformations. The book traces the history of biotransformations, clearly spells out the pros and cons of conducting enzyme-mediated versus whole-cell bioconversions, and gives a variety of examples wherein the bio-reaction is a key element in a reaction sequence leading from cheap starting materials to valuable end products.
9780511526190 (ebook)
Homology theory.
Von Neumann algebras.
QA612.3 / .S56 1995
514/.23
Hochschild cohomology of von Neumann algebras / Allan M. Sinclair, Roger R. Smith. - Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 1995. - 1 online resource (vii, 196 pages) : digital, PDF file(s). - London Mathematical Society lecture note series ; 203 . - London Mathematical Society lecture note series ; 203. .
Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Oct 2015).
1. Completely Bounded Operators -- 2. Derivations -- 3. Averaging in Continuous and Normal Cohomology -- 4. Completely Bounded Cohomology -- 5. Hyperfinite Subalgebras -- 6. Continuous Cohomology -- 7. Stability of Products -- 8. Appendix.
This is an introductory text intended to give the non-specialist a comprehensive insight into the science of biotransformations. The book traces the history of biotransformations, clearly spells out the pros and cons of conducting enzyme-mediated versus whole-cell bioconversions, and gives a variety of examples wherein the bio-reaction is a key element in a reaction sequence leading from cheap starting materials to valuable end products.
9780511526190 (ebook)
Homology theory.
Von Neumann algebras.
QA612.3 / .S56 1995
514/.23