Namespaces
Variants
Actions

User:Richard Pinch/sandbox-WP2

From Encyclopedia of Mathematics
< User:Richard Pinch
Revision as of 18:31, 11 September 2013 by Richard Pinch (talk | contribs) (Start article: Ruelle zeta function)
Jump to: navigation, search



Gowers norm

For the function field norm, see uniform norm; for uniformity in topology, see uniform space.

In mathematics, in the field of additive combinatorics, a Gowers norm or uniformity norm is a class of norm on functions on a finite group or group-like object which are used in the study of arithmetic progressions in the group. They are named after Timothy Gowers who introduced them in his work on Szemerédi's theorem.

Let f be a complex-valued function on a group G and let J denote complex conjugation. The Gowers d-norm is

\[ \Vert f \Vert_{U^d(g)} = \mathbf{E}_{x,h_1,\ldots,h_d \in G} \prod_{\omega_1,\ldots,\omega_d \in \{0,1\}} J^{\omega_1+\cdots+\omega_d} f\left({x + h_1\omega_1 + \cdots + h_d\omega_d}\right) \ . \]

The inverse conjecture for these norms is the statement that if f has L-infinity norm (uniform norm in the usual sense) equal to 1 then the Gowers s-norm is bounded above by 1, with equality if and only if f is of the form exp(2πi g) with g a polynomial of degree at most s. This can be interpreted as saying that the Gowers norm is controlled by polynomial phases.

The inverse conjecture holds for vector spaces over a finite field. However, for cyclic groups Z/N this is not so, and the class of polynomial phases has to be extended to control the norm.

References

Ruelle zeta function

A zeta function associated with a dynamical system.

Let f be a function defined on a manifold M, such that the set of fixed points Fix(f n) is finite for all n > 1. Further let φ be a function on M with values in d × d complex matrices. The zeta function of the first kind is[1]

\[ \zeta(z) = \exp\left({ \sum_{m\ge1} \frac{z^m}{m} \sum_{x\in\mathrm{Fix}(f^m)} \mathrm{Tr} \left({ \prod_{k=0}^{m-1} \phi(f^k(x)) }\right) }\right) \]

In the special case d = 1, φ = 1, we have[1]

\[ \zeta(z) = \exp\left({ \sum_{m\ge1} \frac{z^m}{m} \left|{\mathrm{Fix}(f^m)}\right|}\right) \]

which is the Artin–Mazur zeta function.

The Ihara zeta function is an example of a Ruelle zeta function.[2]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Terras (2010) p. 28
  2. Terras (2010) p. 29
  • Lapidus, Michel L.; van Frankenhuijsen, Machiel; Fractal geometry, complex dimensions and zeta functions. Geometry and spectra of fractal strings, ser. Springer Monographs in Mathematics (2006), Springer-Verlag, Zbl 1119.28005 ISBN: 0-387-33285-5
  • Terras, Audrey; Zeta Functions of Graphs: A Stroll through the Garden, ser. Cambridge Studies in Advanced Mathematics 128 (2010), Cambridge University Press, Zbl 1206.05003 ISBN: 0-521-11367-9


Spinor genus

A classification of quadratic forms and lattices over the ring of integers, introduced by Martin Eichler. It refines the genus but may be coarser than proper equivalence

We define two Z-lattices L and M in a quadratic space V over Q to be spinor equivalent if there exists a transformation g in the proper orthogonal group O+(V) and for every prime p there exists a local transformation fp of Vp of spinor norm 1 such that M = g fpLp.

A spinor genus is an equivalence class for this equivalence relation. Properly equivalent lattices are in the same spinor genus, and lattices in the same spinor genus are in the same genus. The number of spinor genera in a genus is a power of two, and can be determined effectively.

An important result is that for indefinite forms of dimension at least three, each spinor genus contains exactly one proper equivalence class.

References

  • Cassels, J. W. S.; Rational Quadratic Forms, ser. London Mathematical Society Monographs 13 (1978), Academic Press, Zbl 0395.10029 ISBN: 0-12-163260-1
  • Conway, J. H.; Sloane, N. J. A.; Sphere packings, lattices and groups, ser. Grundlehren der Mathematischen Wissenschaften 290 , Springer-Verlag, Zbl 0915.52003 ISBN: 0-387-98585-9

u-invariant

The universal invariant or u-invariant of a field describes the structure of quadratic forms over the field.

The universal invariant u(F) of a field F is the largest dimension of an anisotropic quadratic space over F, or ∞ if this does not exist. Since formally real fields have anisotropic quadratic forms (sums of squares) in every dimension, the invariant is only of interest for other fields. An equivalent formulation is that u is the smallest number such that every form of dimension greater than u is isotropic, or that every form of dimension at least u is universal.

Examples

Properties

  • If F is not formally real then u(F) is at most \(q(F) = \left|{F^\star / F^{\star2}}\right|\), the index of the squares in the multiplicative group of F.[3]
  • Every even integer occurs as the value of u(F) for some F.[4]
  • u(F) cannot take the values 3, 5, or 7.[5] A field exists with u = 9.[6]

The general u-invariant

Since the u-invariant is of little interest in the case of formally real fields, we define a general u-invariant to be the maximum dimension of an anisotropic form in the torsion subgroup of the Witt ring of F, or ∞ if this does exist.[7] For non-formally real fields, the Witt ring is torsion, so this agrees with the previous definition.[8] For a formally real field, the general u-invariant is either even or ∞.

Properties

References

  1. Lam (2005) p.376
  2. Lam (2005) p.406
  3. Lam (2005) p. 400
  4. Lam (2005) p. 402
  5. Lam (2005) p. 401
  6. Izhboldin, Oleg T.; Fields of u-Invariant 9, Annals of Mathematics, 2 ser, 154 no. 3 (2001), pp. 529–587, Zbl 0998.11015URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3062141]
  7. Lam (2005) p. 409
  8. 8.0 8.1 Lam (2005) p. 410
  • Lam, Tsit-Yuen; Introduction to Quadratic Forms over Fields, ser. Graduate Studies in Mathematics 67 (2005), American Mathematical Society, Zbl 1068.11023 ISBN: 0-8218-1095-2
  • Rajwade, A. R.; Squares, ser. London Mathematical Society Lecture Note Series 171 (1993), Cambridge University Press, Zbl 0785.11022 ISBN: 0-521-42668-5


Zimmert set

In mathematics, a Zimmert set is a set of positive integers associated with the structure of quotients of hyperbolic three-space by a Bianchi group.

Definition

Fix an integer d and let D be the discriminant of the imaginary quadratic field Q(√-d). The Zimmert set Z(d) is the set of positive integers n such that 4n2 < -D-3 and n ≠ 2; D is a quadratic non-residue of all odd primes in d; n is odd if D is not congruent to 5 modulo 8. The cardinality of Z(d) may be denoted by z(d).

Property

For all but a finite number of d we have z(d) > 1: indeed this is true for all d > 10476.[1]

Application

Let Γd denote the Bianchi group PSL(2,Od), where Od is the ring of integers of. As a subgroup of PSL(2,C), there is an action of Γd on hyperbolic 3-space H3, with a fundamental domain. It is a theorem that there are only finitely many values of d for which Γd can contain an arithmetic subgroup G for which the quotient H3/G is a link complement. Zimmert sets are used to obtain results in this direction: z(d) is a lower bound for the rank of the largest free quotient of Γd[2] and so the result above implies that almost all Bianchi groups have non-cyclic free quotients.[1]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Mason, A.W.; Odoni, R.W.K.; Stothers, W.W.; Almost all Bianchi groups have free, non-cyclic quotients, Math. Proc. Camb. Philos. Soc., 111 no. 1 (1992), pp. 1–6, Zbl 0758.20009, DOI: 10.1017/S0305004100075101URL: http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=2095508]
  2. Zimmert, R.; Zur SL2 der ganzen Zahlen eines imaginär-quadratischen Zahlkörpers, Inventiones mathematicae, 19 (1973), pp. 73–81, Zbl 0254.10019
How to Cite This Entry:
Richard Pinch/sandbox-WP2. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Richard_Pinch/sandbox-WP2&oldid=30529