Gowers norm

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Template:Short description Template:Redirect In mathematics, in the field of additive combinatorics, a Gowers norm or uniformity norm is a class of norms on functions on a finite group or group-like object which quantify the amount of structure present, or conversely, the amount of randomness.[1] They are used in the study of arithmetic progressions in the group. They are named after Timothy Gowers, who introduced it in his work on Szemerédi's theorem.[2]

Definition

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

fUd(G)2d=x,h1,,hdGω1,,ωd{0,1}Jω1++ωdf(x+h1ω1++hdωd) .

Gowers norms are also defined for complex-valued functions f on a segment [N]=0,1,2,...,N1, where N is a positive integer. In this context, the uniformity norm is given as fUd[N]=f~Ud(/N~)/1[N]Ud(/N~), where N~ is a large integer, 1[N] denotes the indicator function of [N], and f~(x) is equal to f(x) for x[N] and 0 for all other x. This definition does not depend on N~, as long as N~>2dN.

Inverse conjectures

An inverse conjecture for these norms is a statement asserting that if a bounded function f has a large Gowers d-norm then f correlates with a polynomial phase of degree d − 1 or other object with polynomial behaviour (e.g. a (d − 1)-step nilsequence). The precise statement depends on the Gowers norm under consideration.

The Inverse Conjecture for vector spaces over a finite field 𝔽 asserts that for any δ>0 there exists a constant c>0 such that for any finite-dimensional vector space V over 𝔽 and any complex-valued function f on V, bounded by 1, such that fUd[V]δ, there exists a polynomial sequence P:V/ such that

|1|V|xVf(x)e(P(x))|c,

where e(x):=e2πix. This conjecture was proved to be true by Bergelson, Tao, and Ziegler.[3][4][5]

The Inverse Conjecture for Gowers Ud[N] norm asserts that for any δ>0, a finite collection of (d − 1)-step nilmanifolds δ and constants c,C can be found, so that the following is true. If N is a positive integer and f:[N] is bounded in absolute value by 1 and fUd[N]δ, then there exists a nilmanifold G/Γδ and a nilsequence F(gnx) where gG, xG/Γ and F:G/Γ bounded by 1 in absolute value and with Lipschitz constant bounded by C such that:

|1Nn=0N1f(n)F(gnx)|c.

This conjecture was proved to be true by Green, Tao, and Ziegler.[6][7] It should be stressed that the appearance of nilsequences in the above statement is necessary. The statement is no longer true if we only consider polynomial phases.

References

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