Geometric Group Theory

Geometric Group Theory Unit 9 – Amenable Groups: Følner Sequences

Amenable groups are a fascinating class of groups that admit finitely additive, translation-invariant probability measures. Introduced by John von Neumann in 1929, these groups have deep connections to measure theory, ergodic theory, and geometric group theory. Følner sequences are a key tool for studying amenable groups. These sequences of finite subsets asymptotically minimize the ratio of boundary size to subset size, providing a way to approximate invariant measures and explore asymptotic properties of amenable groups.

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Key Concepts and Definitions

  • Amenable groups are a class of groups that admit a finitely additive, translation-invariant probability measure
  • The concept of amenability was introduced by John von Neumann in 1929 to study the Banach-Tarski paradox
  • Amenability is a measure-theoretic property that captures the idea of a group having "almost invariant" finite subsets
  • A group GG is amenable if for every ε>0\varepsilon > 0 and every finite subset KGK \subseteq G, there exists a finite subset FGF \subseteq G such that KFF<εF|KF \triangle F| < \varepsilon |F|
    • KFKF denotes the set {kf:kK,fF}\{kf : k \in K, f \in F\}
    • \triangle represents the symmetric difference between sets
  • The class of amenable groups includes all finite groups, abelian groups, and solvable groups
  • Non-amenable groups include free groups on two or more generators and groups containing free subgroups (e.g., SL(2,Z)SL(2, \mathbb{Z}))

Historical Context and Development

  • The study of amenable groups originated from John von Neumann's work on the Banach-Tarski paradox in 1929
  • Von Neumann introduced the concept of amenability to characterize groups for which the Banach-Tarski paradox does not occur
  • The term "amenable" was coined by M. M. Day in 1949, derived from the German word "messbar" meaning "measurable"
  • In the 1940s and 1950s, the theory of amenable groups was further developed by mathematicians such as M. M. Day, E. Følner, and A. N. Kolmogorov
  • Følner's criterion, introduced by Erling Følner in 1955, provided a combinatorial characterization of amenability using finite subsets with small boundary
  • The study of amenable groups gained momentum in the 1960s and 1970s with contributions from mathematicians like F. P. Greenleaf, E. Granirer, and A. Hulanicki
  • In recent decades, amenable groups have found applications in various areas of mathematics, including ergodic theory, operator algebras, and geometric group theory

Properties of Amenable Groups

  • Amenable groups are closed under taking subgroups, quotients, extensions, and direct limits
  • The class of amenable groups is closed under group extensions: if NN is a normal subgroup of GG and both NN and G/NG/N are amenable, then GG is amenable
  • Amenable groups satisfy the Følner condition: for every ε>0\varepsilon > 0 and every finite subset KGK \subseteq G, there exists a finite subset FGF \subseteq G such that KFF<εF|KF \triangle F| < \varepsilon |F|
  • Amenable groups have invariant means: there exists a linear functional m:(G)Rm: \ell^\infty(G) \to \mathbb{R} such that m(1)=1m(\mathbf{1}) = 1 and m(f)=m(fg)m(f) = m(f_g) for all f(G)f \in \ell^\infty(G) and gGg \in G, where fg(x)=f(gx)f_g(x) = f(gx)
  • The class of amenable groups is strictly larger than the class of groups with subexponential growth
  • Amenable groups satisfy the strong Følner condition: for every ε>0\varepsilon > 0 and every finite subset KGK \subseteq G, there exists a finite subset FGF \subseteq G such that kFF<εF|kF \triangle F| < \varepsilon |F| for all kKk \in K

Følner Sequences: Introduction and Significance

  • A Følner sequence is a sequence of finite subsets of a group that asymptotically minimizes the ratio of the boundary size to the subset size
  • Formally, a sequence (Fn)nN(F_n)_{n \in \mathbb{N}} of finite subsets of a group GG is a Følner sequence if for every gGg \in G, limngFnFnFn=0\lim_{n \to \infty} \frac{|gF_n \triangle F_n|}{|F_n|} = 0
  • The existence of a Følner sequence characterizes amenability: a group is amenable if and only if it admits a Følner sequence
  • Følner sequences provide a way to approximate invariant measures on amenable groups
  • The concept of Følner sequences is central to the study of asymptotic properties of amenable groups, such as growth and isoperimetric inequalities
  • Følner sequences have applications in ergodic theory, particularly in the study of invariant measures and entropy

Constructing Følner Sequences

  • Constructing Følner sequences for specific amenable groups can be a challenging task
  • For finitely generated abelian groups, Følner sequences can be constructed using rectangular boxes or balls in the Cayley graph
  • In nilpotent groups, Følner sequences can be obtained by considering sets of the form {gG:gn}\{g \in G : \|g\| \leq n\}, where \|\cdot\| is a suitable norm on the group
  • For solvable groups, Følner sequences can be constructed inductively using the extensions of Følner sequences for the derived series
  • In some cases, Følner sequences can be obtained by considering level sets of suitable functions on the group (e.g., word length or distance functions)
  • The construction of Følner sequences often relies on the specific structure and properties of the group under consideration

Examples and Applications

  • The integers Z\mathbb{Z} are amenable, and a Følner sequence is given by the intervals Fn={n,n+1,,n1,n}F_n = \{-n, -n+1, \ldots, n-1, n\}
  • The free group on two generators, F2F_2, is not amenable, as it contains a subgroup isomorphic to the free group on countably many generators
  • Amenable groups have found applications in the study of the Banach-Tarski paradox: the paradox does not occur in dimensions three and higher for amenable groups
  • In ergodic theory, amenable groups are precisely the groups for which the mean ergodic theorem holds for all unitary representations
  • Amenability plays a role in the study of group actions on measure spaces and the existence of invariant measures
  • The Følner condition has been used to study the growth and isoperimetric properties of finitely generated groups
  • Amenable groups have been studied in relation to the Novikov conjecture and the Baum-Connes conjecture in topology and operator algebras

Connections to Other Areas of Mathematics

  • Amenable groups have deep connections to various areas of mathematics, including:
    • Ergodic theory: amenability is closely related to the existence of invariant measures and the study of group actions on measure spaces
    • Operator algebras: amenability plays a role in the study of group C*-algebras and von Neumann algebras
    • Geometric group theory: amenability is related to growth properties, isoperimetric inequalities, and the geometry of Cayley graphs
    • Harmonic analysis: amenability is connected to the existence of invariant means and the study of unitary representations
  • The Følner condition has analogues in other settings, such as measured equivalence relations and metric spaces
  • Amenability has been generalized to various other structures, including semigroups, groupoids, and measured equivalence relations
  • The study of amenable groups has inspired the development of new concepts and techniques in related areas, such as sofic groups and hyperlinear groups

Advanced Topics and Open Problems

  • The Følner-Adyan theorem states that a finitely presented group is amenable if and only if it does not contain a non-abelian free subgroup
  • The von Neumann-Day problem asks whether every non-amenable group contains a non-abelian free subgroup; it remains open
  • The Greenleaf-Ruzsa problem concerns the existence of Følner sequences with additional regularity properties, such as polynomial growth of the boundary
  • The study of amenable actions and the associated Zimmer program aim to understand the structure of group actions on measure spaces
  • The Baum-Connes conjecture, which relates the K-theory of a group C*-algebra to the equivariant K-homology of the group's classifying space, has been verified for large classes of amenable groups
  • The Novikov conjecture, which concerns the homotopy invariance of higher signatures, has been proven for amenable groups
  • The relationship between amenability and other group properties, such as Kazhdan's property (T) and the Haagerup property, is an active area of research
  • Generalizations of amenability, such as coarse amenability and measured amenability, have been studied in the context of metric spaces and measured equivalence relations


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AP® and SAT® are trademarks registered by the College Board, which is not affiliated with, and does not endorse this website.