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Thompson’s Group . Jim Belk. Associative Laws. Let be the following piecewise-linear homeomorphism of :. Associative Laws. This homeomorphism corresponds to the operation . It is called the basic associative law. . . . . . . Associative Laws.
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Thompson’s Group Jim Belk
Associative Laws Let be the following piecewise-linear homeomorphism of :
Associative Laws This homeomorphism corresponds to the operation . It is called the basic associative law.
Associative Laws Here’s a different associative law . It corresponds to .
Associative Laws A dyadic subdivision of is any subdivision obtained by repeatedly cutting intervals in half:
Associative Laws An associative law is a PL-homeomorphism that maps linearly between the intervals of two dyadic subdivisions.
Associative Laws
Thompson’s Group Thompson’s Group is the group of all associative laws (under composition).
Thompson’s Group Thompson’s Group is the group of all associative laws (under composition). If , then: • Every slope of is a power of 2. • Every breakpoint of has dyadic rational coordinates. The converse also holds. ½ 1 (½,¾) (¼,½) 2
Properties of • is an infinite discrete group.
Properties of • is an infinite discrete group. • is torsion-free.
Properties of • is an infinite discrete group. • is torsion-free. • is generated by and .
Properties of • is an infinite discrete group. • is torsion-free. • is generated by and . • is finitely presented (two relations).
Properties of • is an infinite discrete group. • is torsion-free. • is generated by and . • is finitely presented (two relations). • is simple. Every proper quotient of is abelian.
Free Group The Geometry of Groups Let be a group with generating set . The Cayley graph has: • One vertex for each element of . • One edge for each pair
Free Group This makes into a metric space, which lets us study groups as geometric objects. Free Group
Free Group For example, we could investigate the volume growth of balls in .
Polynomial Growth Exponential Growth Free Group For example, we could investigate the volume growth of balls in .
Polynomial Growth Exponential Growth Free Group It’s not too hard to show that Thompson’s group has exponential growth.
The Geometry of • has exponential growth. • Every nonabelian subgroup of contains . • does not contain the free group on two elements. • Balls in are highly nonconvex (Belk and Bux).
The Isoperimetric Constant Let be the Cayley graph of a group . If is a finite subset of , its boundary consists of all edges between and .
The Isoperimetric Constant Let be the Cayley graph of a group . The isoperimetric constantis: is amenable if .
Amenability Example. is amenable: For an square, as .
Amenability Example.The free group on two generators is not amenable. In fact: for any finite subset . So the isoperimetric constant is .
Is Amenable? This question has been open for decades. For most groups of interest, the following algorithm determines amenability: • Does contain the free group on two generators? If so, then is not amenable. • Does have subexponential growth? If so, then is amenable. • Can be built out of known amenable groups using extensions and unions? If so, then is amenable. But it doesn’t work on .
Some Modest Progress The following is joint work with Ken Brown: • We have invented a new way of looking at called “forest diagrams” that simplifies the action of the generators and . • Using forest diagrams, we have derived a formula for the metric on . • Using forest diagrams, we have constructed a sequence of (convex) sets in whose isoperimetric ratios approach .