Difference between revisions of "Discrete subgroup"
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A subgroup <img align="absmiddle" border="0" src="https://www.encyclopediaofmath.org/legacyimages/d/d033/d033150/d0331501.png" /> of a topological group <img align="absmiddle" border="0" src="https://www.encyclopediaofmath.org/legacyimages/d/d033/d033150/d0331502.png" /> (in particular, a subgroup of a Lie group) which is a discrete subset of the topological space <img align="absmiddle" border="0" src="https://www.encyclopediaofmath.org/legacyimages/d/d033/d033150/d0331503.png" />. In locally compact topological groups (in particular, in Lie groups) one distinguishes lattices — i.e. discrete subgroups for which the quotient space <img align="absmiddle" border="0" src="https://www.encyclopediaofmath.org/legacyimages/d/d033/d033150/d0331504.png" /> has finite volume in the sense of the measure induced by the left-invariant [[Haar measure|Haar measure]] on the group <img align="absmiddle" border="0" src="https://www.encyclopediaofmath.org/legacyimages/d/d033/d033150/d0331505.png" />. The concept of lattices includes that of uniform discrete subgroups, for which the quotient space <img align="absmiddle" border="0" src="https://www.encyclopediaofmath.org/legacyimages/d/d033/d033150/d0331506.png" /> is compact. | A subgroup <img align="absmiddle" border="0" src="https://www.encyclopediaofmath.org/legacyimages/d/d033/d033150/d0331501.png" /> of a topological group <img align="absmiddle" border="0" src="https://www.encyclopediaofmath.org/legacyimages/d/d033/d033150/d0331502.png" /> (in particular, a subgroup of a Lie group) which is a discrete subset of the topological space <img align="absmiddle" border="0" src="https://www.encyclopediaofmath.org/legacyimages/d/d033/d033150/d0331503.png" />. In locally compact topological groups (in particular, in Lie groups) one distinguishes lattices — i.e. discrete subgroups for which the quotient space <img align="absmiddle" border="0" src="https://www.encyclopediaofmath.org/legacyimages/d/d033/d033150/d0331504.png" /> has finite volume in the sense of the measure induced by the left-invariant [[Haar measure|Haar measure]] on the group <img align="absmiddle" border="0" src="https://www.encyclopediaofmath.org/legacyimages/d/d033/d033150/d0331505.png" />. The concept of lattices includes that of uniform discrete subgroups, for which the quotient space <img align="absmiddle" border="0" src="https://www.encyclopediaofmath.org/legacyimages/d/d033/d033150/d0331506.png" /> is compact. | ||
Revision as of 14:01, 29 January 2012
A subgroup of a topological group (in particular, a subgroup of a Lie group) which is a discrete subset of the topological space . In locally compact topological groups (in particular, in Lie groups) one distinguishes lattices — i.e. discrete subgroups for which the quotient space has finite volume in the sense of the measure induced by the left-invariant Haar measure on the group . The concept of lattices includes that of uniform discrete subgroups, for which the quotient space is compact.
If is a compact subgroup of a locally compact topological group , a subgroup is discrete if and only if it is a discrete group of transformations of the space (in the sense of the action induced by the natural action of the group on ). Here, is a lattice (a uniform discrete subgroup) if and only if the quotient space has finite volume (is compact) in the sense of the measure induced by the -invariant measure on . This makes it possible to utilize geometric methods when studying discrete subgroups of Lie groups.
One of the principal problems in the theory of discrete subgroups of Lie groups is the classification of such subgroups up to commensurability. Two subgroups and are said to be commensurable if has finite index both in and in . If one of two commensurable subgroups of a locally compact topological group is a discrete subgroup (or a lattice, or a uniform discrete subgroup), so is the other.
Up to the middle of the 20th century one basically studied individual classes of discrete subgroups of Lie groups occurring in arithmetic, function theory and physics. Historically, the first non-trivial discrete subgroup — the subgroup of the group , subsequently named the Kleinian modular group — was in fact studied by J.L. Lagrange and C.F. Gauss in the context of the arithmetic of quadratic forms in two variables. The subgroup of is its natural generalization. The study of this group as a discrete group of transformations of the space of positive-definite quadratic forms in variables formed the subject of reduction theory, developed by A.N. Korkin, E.I. Zolotarev, Ch. Hermite, H. Minkowski, and others in the second half of the nineteenth and in the beginning of the 20th century. A series of arithmetically definable discrete subgroups of classical Lie groups — groups of units of quadratic forms with rational coefficients, groups of units of simple algebras over , groups of integral symplectic matrices — were studied by C.L. Siegel in the 1940s. He proved, in particular, that all these groups are lattices in the respective Lie groups.
In the theory of functions of a complex variable the integration of algebraic functions and, more generally, the solution of differential equations with algebraic coefficients, resulted in the study of certain special functions (subsequently named automorphic functions, cf. Automorphic function) which are invariant with respect to various discrete groups consisting of transformations of the form
(1) |
Certain discrete subgroups of were studied in the mid-19th century by Hermite, R. Dedekind and I.L. Fuchs. They also included the group (though represented differently from the presentation used by Lagrange and Gauss). A wide class of such groups, including the group and certain subgroups of commensurable with it, were studied by F. Klein. Almost simultaneously (1881–1882) H. Poincaré gave a geometric description of all discrete groups consisting of transformations of the form (1). He named these groups Fuchsian groups (cf. Fuchsian group).
In the first half of the 20th century studies were made of individual classes of automorphic functions in several variables. These functions were connected with certain arithmetically definable discrete subgroups of the group (Hilbert's modular functions), (Siegel's modular functions) and other semi-simple Lie groups.
Since the late 19th century, crystallographic studies have centred on the symmetry groups of crystallographic lattices, which are identical with uniform discrete subgroups of the group of motions of three-dimensional Euclidean space. These, together with the related groups of motions of -dimensional Euclidean space (the so-called crystallographic groups, cf. Crystallographic group) were studied in 1911 by L. Bieberbach from the algebraic point of view. He demonstrated, in particular, the theorem according to which any crystallographic group contains a uniform discrete subgroup of parallel translations.
All these studies provided the initial material for the general theory of discrete subgroups of Lie groups, the foundations of which were laid in the 1950s and 1960s.
An exhaustive theory of discrete subgroups of nilpotent Lie groups has been constructed [9]. Its main statements are listed below: 1) If is a unipotent algebraic group defined over , then the group of its integer points is a uniform discrete subgroup in the group of its real points. (Here is a simply-connected nilpotent Lie group.) 2) Any uniform discrete subgroup of a simply-connected nilpotent Lie group is arithmetic in the sense that there exist a unipotent algebraic group defined over and an isomorphism such that the subgroup is commensurable with . 3) If , are uniform discrete subgroups of simply-connected nilpotent Lie groups and respectively, then any isomorphism can be uniquely extended to an isomorphism . 4) An abstract group is imbeddable as a uniform discrete subgroup in a simply-connected nilpotent Lie group if and only if is a finitely-generated torsion-free nilpotent group.
Discrete subgroups of solvable Lie groups have been fairly thoroughly studied, but the results are less complete than those obtained for nilpotent groups. Any lattice in a solvable Lie group is a uniform discrete subgroup. If is a lattice in a simply-connected solvable Lie group , then has a faithful matrix representation in which the elements of are represented by integer matrices [13]. This statement may be regarded as a generalization of Mal'tsev's theorem 2) above. The following theorem is the analogue of theorem 4). Any lattice in a simply-connected solvable Lie group is a strictly polycyclic group; conversely, any strictly polycyclic group has a subgroup of finite index which is isomorphic to a lattice in a simply-connected solvable Lie group.
The most precise results in the theory of discrete subgroups of Lie groups concern discrete subgroups of non-solvable and, in particular, semi-simple Lie groups. In [4] the following theorem was demonstrated, which includes, as special cases, Mal'tsev's theorem 1), the Dirichlet theorem on the units of an algebraic number field and Siegel's results (see above) on certain arithmetic discrete subgroups of semi-simple Lie groups. Let be a linear algebraic group defined over . For the subgroup to be a lattice in it is necessary and sufficient for not to permit rational homomorphisms into the group , defined over (this condition is satisfied, for example, if is semi-simple or unipotent). For the subgroup to be a uniform discrete subgroup in it is necessary and sufficient, in addition, that all unipotent elements of the group lie in , where is the unipotent radical of .
The arithmeticity theorem [11] which follows is the analogue of theorem 2) for discrete subgroups of semi-simple Lie groups. Let be a lattice in a connected semi-simple Lie group without compact factors, and let (for the sake of convenience in formulation) the centre of be trivial. Moreover, let the lattice be irreducible in the sense that cannot be non-trivially decomposed into a direct product so that is commensurable with a subgroup of the form where and . Then, if the real rank of exceeds one, the group is arithmetic in the sense that there exist a semi-simple algebraic group , defined over , and a homomorphism (where is the connected component of the unit of the group ) such that the kernel of the homomorphism is compact and the subgroup is commensurable with . The assumption that the real rank of exceeds one is essential. It is known that the theorem is invalid for the group (the group of motions of the Lobachevskii plane), which on the whole plays an important role in the theory of discrete subgroups of Lie groups, and also for the groups of motions of the three-, four- and five-dimensional Lobachevskii spaces [6], [8].
The strong rigidity theorem which follows is the analogue of theorem 3) for discrete subgroups of semi-simple Lie groups. Let , be irreducible lattices in connected semi-simple Lie groups , without compact factors, and let the centres of , be trivial. Then, if and are not isomorphic to , any isomorphism can be uniquely extended to an isomorphism [10], [14]. Historically, the proof of this theorem was preceded by the proof of the weak rigidity theorem
on the extension of isomorphisms which are sufficiently close to the identity (if ). One consequence of the weak rigidity theorem is the existence of a basis in which the elements of a discrete subgroup are written in the form of algebraic numbers. This fact played an important role in the development of the theory of discrete subgroups of semi-simple Lie groups.
Regarding discrete subgroups of the group see Fuchsian group.
Of the other general theorems about discrete subgroups of semi-simple Lie groups one may mention Borel's density theorem and Wang's maximality theorem. Let be a lattice in a connected semi-simple Lie group which has no compact factors. Then is dense in in the Zariski topology [3], and is contained in only a finite number of lattices in [17].
The description of lattices in arbitrary Lie groups can be reduced, to some extent, to the description of lattices in semi-simple Lie groups, in view of theorems analogous to the Bieberbach theorem on crystallographic groups mentioned above. One says that a normal subgroup of a Lie group has the Bieberbach property if for any lattice in the subgroup is closed (and, in such a case, is automatically a lattice in , while is a lattice in ). Bieberbach's theorem says that, in the group of motions of Euclidean space, the subgroup of parallel translations has the Bieberbach property. There exists a generalization of this theorem to Lie groups which are extensions of a simply-connected nilpotent Lie group by a compact group [1]. Another theorem of such a type is the following. Let be a connected Lie group, let be its radical, let be a maximal connected semi-simple subgroup, and let be a maximal connected compact normal subgroup of . Then the subgroup has the Bieberbach property in [2]. It is also known that the Bieberbach property is displayed by the nilpotent radical of a connected solvable Lie group [12] and by the commutator subgroup of a simply-connected nilpotent Lie group [9].
Topological methods (cf. Discrete group of transformations) can be used to prove that any uniform discrete subgroup of a connected Lie group is a finitely-presentable group . In fact, any lattice in a connected Lie group is finitely presentable [17], [18].
References
[1] | L. Auslander, "Bieberbach's theorem on space groups and discrete uniform subgroups of Lie groups" Amer. J. Math. , 83 (1961) pp. 276–280 |
[2] | L. Auslander, "On radicals of discrete subgroups of Lie groups" Amer. J. Math. , 85 (1963) pp. 145–150 |
[3] | A. Borel, "Density properties for certain subgroups of semi-simple groups without compact components" Ann. of Math. , 72 (1960) pp. 179–188 |
[4] | A. Borel, Harish-Chandra, "Arithmetic subgroups of algebraic groups" Ann. of Math. , 75 (1962) pp. 485–535 |
[5a] | A. Weil, "Discrete subgroups of Lie groups I" Ann. Math. , 72 (1960) pp. 369–384 |
[5b] | A. Weil, "Discrete subgroups of Lie groups II" Ann. Math. , 75 (1962) pp. 578–602 |
[6] | E.B. Vinberg, "Discrete groups generated by reflections in Lobachevskii spaces" Math. USSR-Sb. , 1 : 3 (1967) pp. 429–444 Mat. Sb. , 72 : 3 (1967) pp. 471–488 |
[7] | H. Garland, M.S. Raghunathan, "Fundamental domains for lattices in (-) rank 1 semisimple Lie groups" Ann. of Math. , 92 (1970) pp. 279–326 |
[8] | V.S. Makarov, "A certain class of discrete Lobachevskii space groups with an infinite fundamental region of finite measure" Soviet Math.-Dokl. , 7 (1966) pp. 328–331 Dokl. Akad. Nauk. SSSR , 167 : 1 (1966) pp. 30–33 |
[9] | A.I. Mal'tsev, "On a class of homogeneous spaces" Izv. Akad. Nauk. SSSR Ser. Mat. , 13 : 1 (1949) pp. 9–32 (In Russian) |
[10] | G.A. Margulis, "Arithmetic properties of discrete subgroups" Russian Math. Surveys , 29 : 1 (1974) pp. 107–156 Uspekhi Mat. Nauk , 29 : 1 (1974) pp. 49–98 |
[11] | G.A. Margulis, "Discrete groups of motions of manifolds of non-positive curvature" R. James (ed.) , Proc. Internat. Congress Mathematicians (Vancouver, 1974) , 2 , Canad. Math. Congress (1975) pp. 21–34 (In Russian) |
[12] | G.D. Mostow, "Factor spaces of solvable groups" Ann. of Math. , 60 (1954) pp. 1–27 |
[13] | G.D. Mostov, "Representative functions on discrete groups and solvable arithmetic subgroups" Amer. J. Math. , 92 (1970) pp. 1–32 |
[14] | G.D. Mostow, "Strong rigidity of locally symmetric spaces" , Princeton Univ. Press (1973) |
[15] | M.S. Raghunathan, "Discrete subgroups of Lie groups" , Springer (1972) |
[16] | A. Selberg, "On discontinuous groups in higher-dimensional symmetric spaces" , Internat. Coll. function theory , Tata Inst. (1960) pp. 147–164 |
[17] | H.-C. Wang, "On a maximality property of subgroups with fundamental domain of finite measure" Amer. J. Math. , 89 (1967) pp. 124–132 |
[18] | H.-C. Wang, "Topics on totally discontinuous groups" , Symmetric spaces , M. Dekker (1972) pp. 459–487 |
Comments
The arithmeticity theorem, mentioned in the main article and saying that an irreducible lattice in a connected semi-simple Lie group without compact factors (and with trivial centre) is an arithmetic group if the real rank of exceeds one, was conjectured by A. Selberg (for uniform discrete subgroups) and by I.I. Pyatetskii-Shapiro (general case), see also [a1]. A first important step to the understanding of non-compact subgroups of finite co-volume, i.e. of finite volume, was the proof by D.A. Kazhdan and G.A. Margulis of the existence of non-trivial unipotent elements in ; this is a related, more special, conjecture of Selberg, cf. [a5]. In [a2] it is proved that this theorem does not hold for the groups , .
Ergodic theory plays an important role in proving some of the arithmeticity results mentioned in the main article, cf. also [a3]. One result in the proof of which ergodic arguments play an important role (the multiplicative ergodic theorem) is Margulis' superrigidity theorem, which for groups of real rank generalizes the A. Weil and G.D. Mostow rigidity theorems. It states the following. Let be a simply-connected Lie group of real points of a real simply-connected algebraic group and let have no compact factors. Assume that the real rank of is . Let be a locally compact non-discrete field and a linear representation such that is not relatively compact and such that its Zariski closure is connected. Then or and extends to a rational representation of , cf. [a6] for a detailed discussion of these results and related matters; cf. also the discussion on strong rigidity in the main article above.
References
[a1] | G.A. Margulus, "Arithmeticity of irreducible lattices in semi-simple groups of rank exceeding 1" , MIR (1977) (In Russian) (Appendix to the Russian translation of: M.S. Raghunathan: "On the congruence subgroup problem" Publ. Math. IHES (1976), 107–161) |
[a2] | G.D. Mostow, "Existence of nonarithmetic monodromy groups" Proc. Nat. Acad. Sc. U.S.A. , 78 (1981) pp. 5948–5950 |
[a3] | R.J. Zimmer, "Ergodic theory and semisimple groups" , Birkhäuser (1984) |
[a4] | J.E. Humphreys, "Arithmetic groups" , Topics in the theory of arithmetic groups , Notre Dame Univ. (1982) pp. 73–97 |
[a5] | D.A. Kazhdan, G.A. Margulis, "A proof of Selberg's conjecture" Math. USSR-Sb. , 4 : 1 (1968) pp. 147–152 Mat. Sb. , 75 (1968) pp. 163–168 |
[a6] | J. Tits, "Travaux de Margulis sur les sous-groupes discrets de groupes de Lie" , Sem. Bourbaki 1975/1976 , Exp. 482 , Springer (1977) pp. 174–190 |
Discrete subgroup. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Discrete_subgroup&oldid=20761