Kazhdan–Margulis theorem

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Template:Short description In Lie theory, an area of mathematics, the Kazhdan–Margulis theorem is a statement asserting that a discrete subgroup in semisimple Lie groups cannot be too dense in the group. More precisely, in any such Lie group there is a uniform neighbourhood of the identity element such that every lattice in the group has a conjugate whose intersection with this neighbourhood contains only the identity. This result was proven in the 1960s by David Kazhdan and Grigory Margulis.[1]

Statement and remarks

The formal statement of the Kazhdan–Margulis theorem is as follows.

Let G be a semisimple Lie group: there exists an open neighbourhood U of the identity e in G such that for any discrete subgroup ΓG there is an element gG satisfying gΓg1U={e}.

Note that in general Lie groups this statement is far from being true; in particular, in a nilpotent Lie group, for any neighbourhood of the identity there exists a lattice in the group which is generated by its intersection with the neighbourhood: for example, in n, the lattice εn satisfies this property for ε>0 small enough.

Proof

The main technical result of Kazhdan–Margulis, which is interesting in its own right and from which the better-known statement above follows immediately, is the following.Template:Sfn

Given a semisimple Lie group without compact factors G endowed with a norm ||, there exists c>1, a neighbourhood U0 of e in G, a compact subset EG such that, for any discrete subgroup ΓG there exists a gE such that |gγg1|c|γ| for all γΓU0.

The neighbourhood U0 is obtained as a Zassenhaus neighbourhood of the identity in G: the theorem then follows by standard Lie-theoretic arguments.

There also exist other proofs. There is one proof which is more geometric in nature and which can give more information,[2][3] and there is a third proof, relying on the notion of invariant random subgroups, which is considerably shorter.[4]

Applications

Selberg's hypothesis

One of the motivations of Kazhdan–Margulis was to prove the following statement, known at the time as Selberg's hypothesis (recall that a lattice is called uniform if its quotient space is compact):

A lattice in a semisimple Lie group is non-uniform if and only if it contains a unipotent element.

This result follows from the more technical version of the Kazhdan–Margulis theorem and the fact that only unipotent elements can be conjugated arbitrarily close (for a given element) to the identity.

Volumes of locally symmetric spaces

A corollary of the theorem is that the locally symmetric spaces and orbifolds associated to lattices in a semisimple Lie group cannot have arbitrarily small volume (given a normalisation for the Haar measure).

For hyperbolic surfaces this is due to Siegel, and there is an explicit lower bound of π/21 for the smallest covolume of a quotient of the hyperbolic plane by a lattice in PSL2() (see Hurwitz's automorphisms theorem). For hyperbolic three-manifolds the lattice of minimal volume is known and its covolume is about 0.0390.[5] In higher dimensions the problem of finding the lattice of minimal volume is still open, though it has been solved when restricting to the subclass of arithmetic groups.[6]

Wang's finiteness theorem

Together with local rigidity and finite generation of lattices the Kazhdan-Margulis theorem is an important ingredient in the proof of Wang's finiteness theorem.[7]

If G is a simple Lie group not locally isomorphic to SL2() or SL2() with a fixed Haar measure and v>0 there are only finitely many lattices in G of covolume less than v.

See also

Notes

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References