Abstract

Szemeredi’s Theorem asserts that any positive-density subset of the integers must contain arbitrarily long arithmetic progressions. It is one of the central results of additive combinatorics. After Szemeredi’s original combinatorial proof, Furstenberg noticed the equivalence of this result to a new phenomenon in ergodic theory that he called ‘multiple recurrence’. Furstenberg then developed some quite general structural results about probabilitypreserving systems to prove the Multiple Recurrence Theorem directly. Furstenberg’s ideas have since given rise to a large body of work around multiple recurrence and the associated ‘non-conventional’ ergodic averages, and to further connections with additive combinatorics. This course is an introduction to multiple recurrence and some of the ergodic theoretic structure that lies behind it. We begin by explaining the correspondence observed by Furstenberg, and then give an introduction to the necessary background from ergodic theory. We emphasize the formulation of multiple recurrence in terms of joinings of probability-preserving systems. The next step is a proof of Roth’s Theorem (the first nontrivial case of Szemeredi’s Theorem), which illustrates the general approach. We finish with a proof of a more recent convergence theorem for some non-conventional ergodic averages, showing some of the newer ideas in use in this area. The classic introduction to this area of combinatorics and ergodic theory is Furstenberg’s book [Fur81], but the treatment below has a more modern point of view. 1.1 Szemeredi’s Theorem and its relatives In 1927, van der Waerden gave a clever combinatorial proof of the following surprising fact:

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