Abstract

Notes on nilspaces: algebraic aspects, Discrete Analysis 2017:15, 59 pp. One of the fundamental insights in modern additive combinatorics is that there is a hierarchy of notions of "pseudorandomness" or "higher order Fourier uniformity" that can be applied either to subsets $A$ of an abelian group $G$, or functions $f: G \to {\bf C}$ of that abelian group. For instance, to understand the pseudorandomness of a subset $A$ of an abelian group $G$, one can count the number of parallelograms $$ (x, x+h_1, x+h_2, x+h_1+h_2)$$ that are fully contained in $A$, or (for a higher notion of pseudorandomness) instead count parallelepipeds $ (x, x+h_1, x+h_2, x+h_1+h_2, x+h_3, x+h_1+h_3,$ $x+h_2+h_3, x+h_1+h_2+h_3)$ or even higher-dimensional parallelepipeds. It turns out that the study of these parallelepipeds is of interest in its own right. For each dimension $d$, let $G^{[d]}$ denote the space of $d$-dimensional parallelepipeds in $G$; this is a certain subgroup of $G^{2^d}$. These spaces interact with each other in a number of ways: for instance, each $d-1$-dimensional face of the discrete cube $\{0,1\}^d$ induces a restriction map from $G^{[d]}$ to $G^{[d-1]}$. For instance, if $(x_1,\dots,x_8)$ lies in $G^{[3]}$, then $(x_1,x_2,x_3,x_4)$ or $(x_1,x_2,x_5,x_6)$ will lie in $G^{[2]}$. In the converse direction, we have the _corner completion_ property: if for instance one has seven vertices $(x_1,\dots,x_7)$ in $G$, with the property that all the two-dimensional subfaces such as $(x_1,x_2,x_3,x_4)$ or $(x_1,x_2,x_5,x_6)$ lie in $G^{[2]}$, then one can find an additional element $x_8$ of $G$ such that $(x_1,\dots,x_8)$ lies in $G^{[3]}$ (indeed, in this case this additional element will be unique). In papers of Host-Kra (["Parallelepipeds, Nilpotent Groups, and Gowers Norms"](https://arxiv.org/abs/math/0606004)) and Camarena-Szegedy (["Nilspaces, nilmanifolds and their morphisms"](https://arxiv.org/abs/1009.3825)), these properties of parallelepipeds were abstracted into axioms for a new type of structure, referred to as parallelepiped structures in Host-Kra and nilspaces in Camarena-Szegedy. In addition to the example given above of parallelepipeds on an abelian group $G$, another fundamental example of these structures comes from _nilmanifolds_ $G/\Gamma$, formed by quotienting a nilpotent Lie group $G$ by a lattice $\Gamma$. For instance, the analogue of parallelograms in this setting would be quadruples of the form $$ (x, g_1 x, g'_1 x, g_1 g'_1 g_2 x)$$ for $x \in G/\Gamma$, $g_1,g'_1 \in G$, and $g_2$ in the commutator subgroup $[G,G]$. Such spaces emerged naturally in an ergodic-theory context in work of Host and Kra (["Nonconventional ergodic averages and nilmanifolds"](http://annals.math.princeton.edu/wp-content/uploads/annals-v161-n1-p08.pdf)) and in a (nonstandard analysis) combinatorial context in work of Szegedy (["On higher order Fourier analysis"](https://arxiv.org/abs/1203.2260)), so it became natural to develop a systematic theory of such spaces, and in particular to look for a satisfactory classification of these spaces. As it turns out, the theory can be divided into two parts. The first part, which is simpler, is the purely "algebraic" theory of nilspaces, in which one does not require that the parallepiped structures are compatible in any way with a measure-theoretic or topological structure on the space. Then there is the "topological" and "measure-theoretic" part of the theory, in which one studies how the parallelepipeds interact with these structures. This division is analogous to the distinction between abstract group theory, and the theory of topological groups (and their interaction with measure-theoretic concepts such as Haar measure). In this paper, the first in a two-part series, the author systematically lays out the algebraic theory of nilspaces. The discussion follows closely the earlier work of Camarena and Szegedy, but with more detailed proofs and additional discussion of key examples. Just as nilpotent groups (or nilmanifolds) can be arranged in a hierarchy depending on the "step" or "nilpotency class" of the underlying nilpotent group, one can also assign a notion of a "step" to a nilspace, with higher step nilspaces being more complicated than lower step ones. For instance, as is shown in this paper, 1-step nilspaces are essentially the same as abelian groups. Perhaps the deepest result established in this paper is the fact that a $k$-step nilspace can always be viewed as an "abelian extension" of a $k-1$-step nilspace, in much the same way that a $k$-step nilpotent group can be viewed as a central extension of a $k-1$-step nilpotent group, furthermore, one can associate with the extension a certain "cocycle" which determines the $k$-step nilspace completely (up to isomorphism) once the underlying $k-1$-step nilspace is specified. Conversely, every such cocycle will generate such a $k$-step nilspace. This machinery will be used in [the second part of the series](http://discreteanalysisjournal.com/article/2106-notes-on-compact-nilspaces) to study compact nilspaces.

Highlights

  • These notes constitute the first part of a detailed exposition of the theory of nilspaces developed by Camarena and Szegedy in the paper [1]

  • The main objects studied in [1] are nilspaces. These objects are defined in terms of some axioms, which rely on the basic notions of discrete cubes and cube morphisms

  • Recall that an affine homomorphism from an abelian group Z1 to an abelian group Z2 is a map of the form x → φ (x) + t, where φ : Z1 → Z2 is a homomorphism and t is some fixed element of Z2

Read more

Summary

Introduction

These notes constitute the first part of a detailed exposition of the theory of nilspaces developed by Camarena and Szegedy in the paper [1]. We treat this theory from the viewpoint of general nilspaces. This provides natural motivation for various important objects and results related to this theory, notably polynomial maps and Leibman’s theorem, and it provides illustrations of several tools and ideas used by Camarena and Szegedy. The final section of the chapter concerns additional algebraic tools introduced in [1] These tools are of inherent interest but are important for the topological part of the theory of nilspaces. An alternative treatment of compact nilspaces is given by Gutman, Manners, and Varjú in [8, 9, 10]

Discrete cubes
Definition of a nilspace
Standard cubes on abelian groups
Filtered groups of degree k as k-step nilspaces
Cubes on a general filtered group
Nilspace morphisms between filtered groups: polynomial maps
Defining cubes on a filtered group in terms of equations
Cubes of degree k on abelian groups
Quotients of filtered groups of degree k as k-step nilspaces
Motivation for a general algebraic characterization
Some basic notions
Nilspaces and parallelepiped structures
Tricubes and the tricube composition
Arrow spaces
Characteristic factors
Translations on a k-step nilspace form a filtered group of degree k
Nilspace morphisms as bundle morphisms
Fibre-surjective morphisms and restricted morphisms
Extensions and cocycles
Translation bundles
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call