C*-algebra mapping preserving positive elements
In mathematics a positive map is a map between C*-algebras that sends positive elements to positive elements. A completely positive map is one that satisfies a stronger, more robust condition.
Let
and
be C*-algebras. A linear map
is called a positive map if
maps positive elements to positive elements:
.
Any linear map
induces another map

in a natural way. If
is identified with the C*-algebra
of
-matrices with entries in
, then
acts as

We then say
is k-positive if
is a positive map and completely positive if
is k-positive for all k.
- Positive maps are monotone, i.e.
for all self-adjoint elements
. - Since
for all self-adjoint elements
, every positive map is automatically continuous with respect to the C*-norms and its operator norm equals
. A similar statement with approximate units holds for non-unital algebras. - The set of positive functionals
is the dual cone of the cone of positive elements of
.
- Every *-homomorphism is completely positive.[1]
- For every linear operator
between Hilbert spaces, the map
is completely positive.[2] Stinespring's theorem says that all completely positive maps are compositions of *-homomorphisms and these special maps. - Every positive functional
(in particular every state) is automatically completely positive. - Given the algebras
and
of complex-valued continuous functions on compact Hausdorff spaces
, every positive map
is completely positive. - The transposition of matrices is a standard example of a positive map that fails to be 2-positive. Let T denote this map on
. The following is a positive matrix in
:
The image of this matrix under
is
which is clearly not positive, having determinant −1. Moreover, the eigenvalues of this matrix are 1,1,1 and −1. (This matrix happens to be the Choi matrix of T, in fact.) Incidentally, a map Φ is said to be co-positive if the composition Φ
T is positive. The transposition map itself is a co-positive map.
- ^ K. R. Davidson: C*-Algebras by Example, American Mathematical Society (1996), ISBN 0-821-80599-1, Thm. IX.4.1
- ^ R.V. Kadison, J. R. Ringrose: Fundamentals of the Theory of Operator Algebras II, Academic Press (1983), ISBN 0-1239-3302-1, Sect. 11.5.21