Mathematicians

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Tianyi Zheng, Amir Mohammadi

  • Similarly, groups with property (T) can be used to construct finite sets of invertible matrices which can efficiently approximate any given invertible matrix, in the sense that every matrix can be approximated, to a high degree of accuracy, by a finite product of matrices in the list or their inverses, so that the number of matrices needed is proportional to the number of significant digits in the approximation. [citation needed] [clarification needed]

https://arxiv.org/pdf/1803.06870.pdf

https://www.ihes.fr/~kassel/Rio.pdf

https://zbmath.org/?q=an%3A0516.53046

Measure equivalence

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Definition

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Let   be two discrete groups. They are said to be measure equivalent to each other if there exists a measure space   and commuting  -preserving, essentially free actions   such that each action admits a measurable fundamental domain of finite measure.

This is an equivalence relation, though its transitivity is not obvious (it follows from the existence of fibred product in an appropriate category).

Examples of measurably equivalent groups

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The fundamental example of two measure-equivalent groups is the following: if   is a locally compact group and   are lattices in   they are measure equivalent. The coupling is given by the actions by multiplication on the left (for  ) and on the right (for  ) on  . For example, a nonabelian free group, a surface group and the modular group   are measure equivalent to each other since each of them embeds as a lattice in  .

In particular, any finite-index subgroup in a countable group   is measure equivalent to it, so by transitivity if   has a finite-index subgroup isomorphic to a finite index subgroup of   they are measure equivalent to each other.

The Ornstein--Weiss theorem discussed below implies in particular that any pair of countable amenable groups are measurably equivalent to each other.

Orbit equivalence

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Definition

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Two measure-preserving actions   and   are said to be orbit equivalent to each other if there exists a measurable map   such that   and   sends an orbit of   to an orbit of  [1]. That is, for  -almost every every   and for every   there exists   (depending on   and  ) such that  , and the same property holds for an inverse (in the measurable category) of  .

Stable orbit equivalence

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To define stable orbit equivalence it is convenient to generalise the definiton of orbit equivalence to measured equivalence relations. A measurable equivalence relation   on a Borel probability space   is said to be measure-preserving if for any measurable transformation   of   such that   for  -almost all  . The motivating example is that of the orbit relation of a measure-preserving group action. Two measure-preserving relations   on   are equivalent if there exists a measure-preserving isomorphism   which sends almost every class of   to a class of  , i.e.  .

Two relations   on   are stably equivalent if there exists Borel subsets   such that   interesect almost every class of  , they have positive measure and the restrictions of   to   (with the unique probability measure on   which is a rescaling of the induced measure on  ) are equivalent (in the sense introduced in the preceding paragraph).

Two measure-preserving group actions are said to be stably orbit equivalent if their orbit equivalence relations are stably equivalent.

Stable orbit equivalence and measure equivalence

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The relation between measure equivalence and orbit equivalence is then the following: two groups are measure equivalent to each other if and only if they have free probability measure preserving actions which are stably orbit equivalent to each other.

Examples and non-examples of orbit equivalent actions

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Dye's theorem states that any two essentially free ergodic actions of the infinite cyclic groups   are orbit equivalent to each other. The Ornstein--Weiss theorem discussed below extends this to actions of any pair of amenable groups. Even in the case of actions of   this can be quite hard to see explicitely: for example, if   are irrational numbers such that   is also irrational then Dye's theorem states that there is a measurable bijection from the circle   to itself which sends almost every orbit of the rotation   to an orbit of  ; but it is well--known that there is no measurable section for any of these rotations. Instead the bijection must be constructed in a non-effective way by using the Rokhlin lemma. [2]

On the other hand every non-amenable group admits uncnuntably many orbit inequivalent free ergodic actions[3].

For some groups, for instance lattices in higher-rank semisimple Lie groups, the orbit equivalence class of their actions are very rigid[4].

Measure equivalence and amenability

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An equivalence relation is said to be hyperfinite if it is an increasing union of equivalence relations with finite classes. D. Ornstein and B. Weiss proved that if a countable group   is amenable then all its measure-preserving actions are hyperfinite. A theorem of H. Dye states that all probability measure preserving hyperfinite equivalence relations are generated by a single transformation and they are equivalent to each other. As a consequence of these two results infinite amenable groups form a single class for measure equivalence.

Invariants of measure equivalence

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Some properties which are invariant under measure equivalence are:

Rigidity

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As an analogue to quasi-isometric rigidity one can define measure rigidity for a group as follows:   is measure rigid if any group which is measure equivalent to   must be commensurable to  . Then A. Furman proved that lattices in higher-rank semisimple Lie groups are measure rigid[5].


Notes

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  1. ^ Gaboriau 2011, Definition 2.8.
  2. ^ footnote:they are probably not measurably isomorphic, ref for that?? isomorphism to a subshift via coding??
  3. ^ Ioana, Adrian (2011). "Orbit inequivalent actions for groups containing a copy of  ". Inventiones Mathematicae. 185 (1): 55–73. doi:10.1007/s00222-010-0301-8. Zbl 1230.37010., Epstein, Inessa (2008), Orbit inequivalent actions of non-amenable groups, preprint, arXiv:0707.4215
  4. ^ Furman, Alex (1999). "Orbit equivalence rigidity". Annals of Mathematics. Second Series. 150 (3): 1083–1108. doi:10.2307/121063. Zbl 0943.22012.
  5. ^ Furman, Alex (1999), "Gromov's measure equivalence and rigidity of higher rank lattices", Ann. Math. (2), 150 (3): 1059–1081, arXiv:math/9911262

References

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  • Gaboriau, Damien (2011), "Orbit equivalence and measured group theory", in Bhatia, Rajendra; et al. (eds.), Proceedings of the international congress of mathematicians (ICM 2010), Hyderabad, India, August 19–27, 2010, vol. III, Hackensack, NJ: World Scientific; New Delhi: Hindustan Book Agency, ISBN 978-981-4324-33-5

Definitions

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The cost of a Borel equivalence relation (with countable classes) on a Borel probability space   is   where   are partial isomorphism which generate the relation (that is, in almost all pairs of related points one can be mapped to the other by a finite composition of the  )[1].

The cost of a probability measure preserving group action is the cost of its orbit equivalence relation (two points are related if a group element maps one to the other).

The cost of a countable group is the infimum of the cost over all its probability measure preserving, essentially free actions[2]. A group is said to have fixed price if all of its essentially free actions have the same cost (which must equal the cost of the group itself).

Examples and properties

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A finite group   has fixed price, its cost equals  .

Any equivalence relation with infinite classes has cost at least 1. In particular the infinite cyclic group   has fixed price 1. By the Ornstein--Weiss theorem it follows that any infinite amenable group has fixed price 1.

The free group of rank   has fixed price equal to  . The fundamental group of a closed surface of genus   has fixed price  . More generally if   are two fixed price groups and   a common amenable subgroup (possibly finite) then the amalgamated product   has fixed price and cost equal to  [3].

The cost satisfies a form of multiplicativity: if   contains a finite-index subgroup   then  .

If   has Kazhdan's property (T) then its cost is equal to 1 (it is not known whether it must have fixed price)[4].

The fundamental group of a 3-manifold has cost 1 (it is also not known whether it has fixed price).

Applications

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The cost of a group is an isomorphism invariant of the von Neumann algebra associated to that group. As a consequence, the von Neumann algebras associated with free groups of different ranks are not isomorphic (this was first observed by other means in the work of Dan-Virgil Voiculescu).

It also allows to give examples of equivalence relations that cannot be generated by finitely many elements: the cost of the free group on countably many generators is infinite, so the orbit equivalence relation of any of its free actions gives such an example[5].

The cost has also applications to the rank gradient problem: if   are nested subgroups with   then[6]

 .

Notes

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  1. ^ Levitt (1995) or Gaboriau, 2000 & Definition I.5
  2. ^ Gaboriau (2000, Definition I.5)
  3. ^ Gaboria (2000, Théorème 2)
  4. ^ Hutchcroft & Pete (2020)
  5. ^ Gaboriau (2000, Corollaire 3)
  6. ^ TODO

References

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http://www.ams.org/notices/200402/what-is.pdf

http://www.ams.org/notices/200503/what-is.pdf

http://www.ams.org/notices/200905/rtx090500600p.pdf

http://www.ams.org/notices/200701/what-is-goldman.pdf

https://www.quantamagazine.org/20121002-getting-into-shapes-from-hyperbolic-geometry-to-cube-complexes-and-back/

https://ldtopology.wordpress.com/2012/03/06/wises-conjecture/

http://www.math.uiuc.edu/Software/GAP-Manual/Subgroup_Presentations.html

Yves Guivarc'h is a French mathematician working in probability theory and its relations with group theory.

Career and distinctions

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Guivarc'h is an emeritus professor at the university of Rennes. He was the recipient of the Paul Langevin award of the French Academy of Sciences and of the "prix fondé par l'Etat" in 2015.[1] He was a participant in the "Marie Curie transfer of knowledge" program of the European union, in the project "HANAP".[2]

Mathematical work

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Most of Guivarc'h work concerns random walks on discrete and linear groups

Goulnara Arjantseva, full name Goulnara Nurullovna Arzhantseva (Russian: Гульна́ра Нурулловна Аржа́нцева, * November 28 1973 in Perm Oblast, Soviet Union) is a Russian mathematician. She is a professor at the mathematics institute of University of Vienna and a co-direcor at the Erwin Schrödinger International Institute for Mathematical Physics. She is a specialist on geometric group theory and metric geometry.

Arzhantseva attended Kolomogorov school for young talents in physics and mathematics at Moscow State University where she later also studied in the mathematics department[3]. She defended her Ph.D., on "Generic Properties of Finitely Presented Groups" under the direction of Aleksandr Olshansky there in 1998 [4]. Afterwards she occupied positions at the University of Geneva and the University of Neuchâtel. In October 2010 she was hired at the University of Vienna.

In 2010 she otained a Starting Independent Researcher Grant from the European Research Council.[5]

Selected works

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  • With V. Guba, M. Sapir: Metrics on diagram groups and uniform embeddings in a Hilbert space, Comment. Math. Helv. 81 (2006), no. 4, 911–929.
  • With C. Druţu, M. Sapir: Compression functions of uniform embeddings of groups into Hilbert and Banach spaces, J. Reine Angew. Math. 633 (2009), 213–235.
  • With E. Guentner, J. Špakula: Coarse non-amenability and coarse embeddings, Geom. Funct. Anal. 22 (2012), no. 1, 22–36.
  • With D. Osajda: Infinitely presented small cancellation groups have the Haagerup property, J. Topol. Anal. 7 (2015), no. 3, 389–406.
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Zimmer's conjecture

Zimmer's conjecture is a statement in mathematics which forbids certain manifolds (a type of space) from admitting certain configuration of symmetries[6] It was named after the mathematician Robert Zimmer.

Formally the conjecture states that certain groups, namely lattices in higher-rank Lie groups (the foremost example of which is   when  ) cannot act on manifolds of small dimension (where this is precisely expressed in terms of the Lie group).

The conjecture was widely open until 2017, when most cases were proven by Aaron Brown, Sebastián Hurtado-Salazar and David Fisher.[6][7][8]

Precise statements

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Types of actions

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An action of a group   on a manifold   needs to be specified with a degree of regularity, and eventually an additional structure preserved. For example:

  • A smooth action is an action by smooth diffeomorphisms, that is a morphism  ; one can also ask for more or less differentiable actions, i.e. morphisms to   where   is an integer and  is the group of diffeomorphism of class  ; one can even take   real.
  • A volume-preserving action is defined as ollows: endow   with a volume form   (a top-degree, nowhere vanishing differential form) one can ask that a smooth (or at least differentiable) action preserves it; that is, if the action is given by a morphism   then the pullback  , for any  . The group of diffeomorphisms of   preserving   is usually denoted   so a volume-preserving action is a morphism  .

In all these cases the target group is infinite-dimensional Lie group.

  • If   is a Riemannian manifold then one can ask that the action preserves the Riemannian metric, that is it is goven by a morphism to the isometry group  . This type of action

This is very different from the two types of action described previously since   is a finite-dimensional Lie group; hence the study of isometric actions essentially reduces to the finite-dimensional representation theory of  .

Finally, one can ask for actions with the least degree of regularity.

  • A topological action is an action by homeomorphisms, that is a morphism  .

Statements

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The exact statements of Zimmer's conjectures deals with a fixed group   which is an irreducible lattice in a higher-rank semisimple Lie group  . They state[9] that there is an integer   depending only on   (not on  ) such that

  • If   then any smooth action of   on   has finite image;
  • If   the same is true of any volume-preserving action.

The interest of the conjectures lies in the fact that an explicit formula for   is given; for instance, when   the conjecture is that  ; note that   (hence all its subgroups) acts on the  -sphere since it has a linear representation on  ; moreover   acts on the  -torus, so both conjectures are sharp (of true) in this case.

In general   depends on the representation theory of  ; let   be the minimal dimension of a linear representation of  , let   be the complexification of   and   the smallest dimension (over  ) of a simple factor of  ; then the conjecture is stated with  .

The conjecture is motivated by the superrigidity theorem of Margulis.

topological Zimmer program https://arxiv.org/pdf/2002.01206.pdf

Special cases

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References

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  • Fisher, David (2011), "Groups acting on manifolds: around the Zimmer program", in Farb, Benson; Fisher, David (eds.), Geometry, rigidity, and group actions. Selected papers based on the presentations at the conference in honor of the 60th birthday of Robert J. Zimmer, Chicago, IL, USA, September 2007, Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, ISBN 978-0-226-23788-6, Zbl 1264.22012
  • Brown, Aaron; Fisher, David; Hurtado, Sebastian (2016). "Zimmer's conjecture: Subexponential growth, measure rigidity, and strong property (T)". arXiv:1608.04995 [math.DS].
  • Brown, Aaron; Fisher, David; Hurtado, Sebastian (2020). "Zimmer's conjecture for actions of  ". Inventiones Mathematicae. 221 (3): 1001–1060. doi:10.1007/s00222-020-00962-x. Zbl 07233322.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: Zbl (link)


Category:Symmetry Category:Conjectures that have been proved



https://arxiv.org/abs/0809.4849

https://arxiv.org/abs/1710.02735, https://arxiv.org/abs/1608.04995 https://arxiv.org/abs/2111.14922

https://zbmath.org/?q=an%3A1301.00035 https://www.ams.org/journals/bull/1994-30-02/S0273-0979-1994-00502-6/S0273-0979-1994-00502-6.pdf

A complex differential equation (CDE) is a differential equation whose solutions are functions of a complex variable.

Constructing integrals involves choice of what path to take, which means singularities and branch points of the equation need to be studied. Analytic continuation is used to generate new solutions and this means topological considerations such as monodromy, coverings and connectedness are to be taken into account.

Existence and uniqueness theorems involve the use of majorants and minorants.

Study of rational second order ODEs in the complex plane led to the discovery of new transcendental special functions, which are now known as Painlevé transcendents.

Nevanlinna theory can be used to study complex differential equations. This leads to extensions of Malmquist's theorem.[1]

Generalizations

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Generalizations include partial differential equations in several complex variables, or differential equations on complex manifolds.[2] Also there are at least a couple of ways of studying complex difference equations: either study holomorphic functions[3] which satisfy functional relations given by the difference equation or study discrete analogs[4] of holomorphicity such as monodiffric functions. Also integral equations can be studied in the complex domain.[5]

History

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Some of the early contributors to the theory of complex differential equations include:

See also

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References

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