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Growth rate (group theory)In group theory, the growth rate of a group with respect to a symmetric generating set is a notion that describes how fast a group grows. Building it gradually outwards from the identity element by multiplication by members of the generating set, one can count the number of elements constructed at stage N.
DefinitionSuppose G is a finitely generated group; and T is a finite symmetric set of generators
(symmetric means that if Let us consider subset of all elements of G which can be presented by such "word" of length ≤n Given two nondecreasing positive functions a and b one can say that
they are equivalent ( for example Then the growth rate of the group G can be defined as the correspondent equivalence class of function where | Bn(G,T) | denotes the number of elements in the set Bn(G,T).
Although the function A more geometrical definition use the Cayley graph associated to the set T. The described set Bn(G,T) is simply n-ball with the center at identity element e in the Cayley graph metric d. The distance function d and therefore sets Bn(G,T) depend on the generating set. However, any two such metrics are equivalent in the following sense: for finite symmetric generating sets E, F, there are positive constant C such that As an immediate corollary of this inequality we get that the growth rate does not depend on choice of generating set. Polynomial and exponential growthIf If If ExamplesA free group with a finite rank k > 1 has an exponential growth rate. Z2 has a polynomial growth rate of order 2. The discrete Heisenberg group H3 has a polynomial growth rate of order 4. This fact is a special case of the general theorem of Bass that is discussed in the article on Gromov's theorem. The existence of groups with intermediate growth, i.e. subexponential but not polynomial was open for many years. It was asked by Milnor in 1968 and was finally answered in the positive by Grigorchuk in 1984. There are still open questions in this area and a complete picture of which orders of growth are possible and which are not is missing. See alsoConnections to isoperimetric inequalities ReferencesR. I. Grigorchuk, Degrees of growth of finitely generated groups and the theory of invariant means., Izv. Akad. Nauk SSSR Ser. Mat. 48:5 (1984), 939-985 (Russian). The contents of this article are licensed from Wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License.
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then
).
Any element
can be expressed as a "word" in T-alphabet
) if there is a constant C such that
if
depends on the set of generators T its rate of
growth does not (see below) and therefore the rate of growth gives an invariant of a group.
for some
we say that G has a polynomial growth rate.
The infimum
.
for some
.