<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?><oembed><version><![CDATA[1.0]]></version><provider_name><![CDATA[Geometry and the imagination]]></provider_name><provider_url><![CDATA[https://lamington.wordpress.com]]></provider_url><author_name><![CDATA[Danny Calegari]]></author_name><author_url><![CDATA[https://lamington.wordpress.com/author/dannycaltech/]]></author_url><title><![CDATA[Infinite groups]]></title><type><![CDATA[link]]></type><html><![CDATA[<p>Before looking for surface subgroups, it is worth thinking about how to find (or rule out the existence of) simpler classes of subgroups. This is a very general question, and I do not intend to give a complete survey; however, it is instructive to build up to the question of surface subgroups incrementally and to catalog some of the interesting examples and counterexamples along the way.</p>
<p><strong>Question</strong>: When is a group infinite?</p>
<p>Already this question is more than hard enough. But first we must examine some unstated assumptions behind the question. We have some group <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> in mind, and want to know whether it is infinite or not. But in what sense do we &#8220;have&#8221; the group <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" />? There are several things we might mean by this, including:</p>
<ol>
<li>An explicit group <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> given by generators and relations; i.e. <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G+%3D+%5Clangle+S+%5C%3B+%7C+%5C%3B+R+%5Crangle&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G = &#92;langle S &#92;; | &#92;; R &#92;rangle" title="G = &#92;langle S &#92;; | &#92;; R &#92;rangle" class="latex" />.</li>
<li>A group <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> given together with an action on a set <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5CSigma&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;Sigma" title="&#92;Sigma" class="latex" />.</li>
<li>A group <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> not uniquely defined, but described implicitly in terms of its properties (e.g. <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> is amenable, or left-orderable, or has property <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%28T%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="(T)" title="(T)" class="latex" />, or is linear, or is residually <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=p&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="p" title="p" class="latex" />, or is a <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=3&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="3" title="3" class="latex" />-manifold group, or is finitely presented, or satisfies a law, etc.).</li>
</ol>
<p>In general, it is hard to learn much about a group from a presentation. However, sometimes one can have some success:</p>
<p><strong>Example</strong>: If <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> is given by a finite presentation <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G+%3D+%5Clangle+S+%5C%3B+%7C+%5C%3B+R+%5Crangle&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G = &#92;langle S &#92;; | &#92;; R &#92;rangle" title="G = &#92;langle S &#92;; | &#92;; R &#92;rangle" class="latex" />, the <em>deficiency</em> of the presentation is the difference between the number of generators and the number of relators; i.e. <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%7CS%7C+-+%7CR%7C&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="|S| - |R|" title="|S| - |R|" class="latex" />. The <em>deficiency</em> of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> is the maximum of the deficiency of all finite presentations. In practice, it is very difficult to determine the deficiency of a group, but trivial to determine the deficiency of a given presentation. The rank of the abelianization of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> (i.e. the rank of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=H_1%28G%3B%5Cmathbb%7BZ%7D%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="H_1(G;&#92;mathbb{Z})" title="H_1(G;&#92;mathbb{Z})" class="latex" />) is at least as big as the deficiency; hence if the deficiency is positive, <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> is infinite, and in fact contains a copy of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cmathbb%7BZ%7D&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;mathbb{Z}" title="&#92;mathbb{Z}" class="latex" />.</p>
<p><strong>Example</strong>: Daniel Allcock <a href="http://www.ams.org/mathscinet-getitem?mr=1645509">observed</a> that one can do better when some of the relators <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=R&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="R" title="R" class="latex" /> as above are proper powers. Geometrically, a relator of order <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=p&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="p" title="p" class="latex" /> counts as only &#8220;<img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=1%2Fp&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="1/p" title="1/p" class="latex" /> of a relator&#8221; for the purposes of computing the rank of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=H_1&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="H_1" title="H_1" class="latex" />. Explicitly, Allcock shows that if <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> is a group with a presentation of the form <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G+%3D+%5Clangle+a_1%2C+%5Ccdots%2C+a_n+%5C%3B+%7C+%5C%3B+w_1%5E%7Br_1%7D+%3D+%5Ccdots+%3D+w_m%5E%7Br_m%7D+%3D+1+%5Crangle&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G = &#92;langle a_1, &#92;cdots, a_n &#92;; | &#92;; w_1^{r_1} = &#92;cdots = w_m^{r_m} = 1 &#92;rangle" title="G = &#92;langle a_1, &#92;cdots, a_n &#92;; | &#92;; w_1^{r_1} = &#92;cdots = w_m^{r_m} = 1 &#92;rangle" class="latex" /> then if <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=H&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="H" title="H" class="latex" /> is a normal subgroup of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> of index <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=N+%3C+%5Cinfty&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="N &lt; &#92;infty" title="N &lt; &#92;infty" class="latex" /> and for each index <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=j&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="j" title="j" class="latex" />, one has <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=w_j%5Ek+%5Cnotin+H&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="w_j^k &#92;notin H" title="w_j^k &#92;notin H" class="latex" /> for <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=1+%5Cle+k+%5Cle+r_j-1&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="1 &#92;le k &#92;le r_j-1" title="1 &#92;le k &#92;le r_j-1" class="latex" /> then the rank of the abelianization of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=H&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="H" title="H" class="latex" /> is at least <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=1%2B+N%28n-1+-+%5Csum_i+%5Cfrac+%7B1%7D+%7Br_i%7D%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="1+ N(n-1 - &#92;sum_i &#92;frac {1} {r_i})" title="1+ N(n-1 - &#92;sum_i &#92;frac {1} {r_i})" class="latex" />. If this rank is positive, then <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=H&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="H" title="H" class="latex" /> is infinite, and therefore so is <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" />.</p>
<p><strong>Example</strong>: A much more subtle example is the famous Golod-Shafarevich inequality. Let <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> be a finite <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=p&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="p" title="p" class="latex" />-group (i.e. a group in which every element is torsion, with order a power of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=p&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="p" title="p" class="latex" />). Let <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=n%28G%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="n(G)" title="n(G)" class="latex" /> be the minimum number of generators of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" />, and <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=r%28G%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="r(G)" title="r(G)" class="latex" /> the number of relations between these generators in the corresponding free pro-<img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=p&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="p" title="p" class="latex" />-group (if <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=R%28G%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="R(G)" title="R(G)" class="latex" /> denotes the minimum number of relations defining <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> as a discrete group then <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=R%28G%29+%5Cge+r%28G%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="R(G) &#92;ge r(G)" title="R(G) &#92;ge r(G)" class="latex" />). The G-S inequality is the inequality <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=r%28G%29+%3E+n%28G%29%5E2%2F4&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="r(G) &gt; n(G)^2/4" title="r(G) &gt; n(G)^2/4" class="latex" />. In particular, if <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> is a nontrivial pro-<img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=p&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="p" title="p" class="latex" />-group for which <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=n%28G%29%5E2%2F4+%5Cge+r%28G%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="n(G)^2/4 &#92;ge r(G)" title="n(G)^2/4 &#92;ge r(G)" class="latex" /> (or <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=n%28G%29%5E2%2F4+%5Cge+R%28G%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="n(G)^2/4 &#92;ge R(G)" title="n(G)^2/4 &#92;ge R(G)" class="latex" /> which implies it) then <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> is infinite. This inequality enabled Golod to give a negative answer to the generalized Burnside&#8217;s problem, by showing that for each prime <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=p&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="p" title="p" class="latex" /> there is an infinite group <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> generated by three elements, in which every element has order a power of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=p&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="p" title="p" class="latex" />.</p>
<p><strong>Example</strong>: Marc Lackenby has made very nice use of the Golod-Shafarevich inequality in <a href="http://arxiv.org/abs/0804.1309">his work</a> on Kleinian groups with finite non-cyclic subgroups. A<em> Kleinian group</em> is a finitely generated discrete subgroup of the group of isometries of hyperbolic <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=3&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="3" title="3" class="latex" />-space; such a group is the fundamental group of a hyperbolic <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=3&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="3" title="3" class="latex" />-orbifold. Marc shows that if a Kleinian group <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> contains a finite non-cyclic subgroup, then <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> is finite, or virtually free, or contains a closed surface subgroup. The argument is very interesting and delicate, and I hope to return to it in a later post. But for the moment I just want to remark that the form of the G-S inequality Marc uses is as follows. Let <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> be a group with a finite presentation <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G+%3D+%5Clangle+S+%5C%3B+%7C+%5C%3B+R+%5Crangle&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G = &#92;langle S &#92;; | &#92;; R &#92;rangle" title="G = &#92;langle S &#92;; | &#92;; R &#92;rangle" class="latex" />. Let <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=d_p&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="d_p" title="d_p" class="latex" /> denote the dimension of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=H_1%28G%3B%5Cmathbb%7BF%7D_p%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="H_1(G;&#92;mathbb{F}_p)" title="H_1(G;&#92;mathbb{F}_p)" class="latex" /> where <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=p&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="p" title="p" class="latex" /> is a prime. If <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=d_p%5E2%2F4+%3E+d_p+-+%7CS%7C+%2B+%7CR%7C&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="d_p^2/4 &gt; d_p - |S| + |R|" title="d_p^2/4 &gt; d_p - |S| + |R|" class="latex" /> then <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> is infinite.</p>
<p><strong>Example</strong>: Another way to show a group <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> is infinite is if the relators are very long. This is the method of <em>small cancellation theory</em>, and can be implemented in many different ways. From the modern perspective, a group presentation satisfies a small cancellation condition if one can build a <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=2&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="2" title="2" class="latex" />-complex from the presentation which is manifestly non-positively curved in some explicit sense. For example, if <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G+%3D+%5Clangle+S+%5C%3B+%7C+%5C%3B+R+%5Crangle&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G = &#92;langle S &#92;; | &#92;; R &#92;rangle" title="G = &#92;langle S &#92;; | &#92;; R &#92;rangle" class="latex" /> is a symmetrized presentation (i.e. one in which elements of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=R&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="R" title="R" class="latex" /> are cyclically reduced, and <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=R&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="R" title="R" class="latex" /> is closed under taking cyclic permutations and inverses), a <em>piece</em> is a word <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=b&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="b" title="b" class="latex" /> in the generators if there are distinct relations <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=ba_1%2C+ba_2&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="ba_1, ba_2" title="ba_1, ba_2" class="latex" /> in <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=R&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="R" title="R" class="latex" />. If no relation is a product of fewer than <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=p&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="p" title="p" class="latex" /> pieces, one says that <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> satisfies the small cancellation condition <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=C%28p%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="C(p)" title="C(p)" class="latex" />. So, for example, if <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> is <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=C%286%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="C(6)" title="C(6)" class="latex" />, one can build a <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=2&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="2" title="2" class="latex" />-complex presenting <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> built from polygons, each of which has at least <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=6&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="6" title="6" class="latex" /> sides, and is non-positively curved (and therefore <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> is infinite). </p>
<p><strong>Example</strong>: Instead of showing that a particular group is infinite, one can show that certain groups whose presentations are obtained by a statistical process, are infinite <em>with overwhelming probability</em>. Yann Ollivier wrote an <a href="http://www.umpa.ens-lyon.fr/~yollivie/publs/randomgroups.pdf">introduction</a> to Gromov&#8217;s theory of <em>Random Groups</em>, in which it is made precise what one means by a &#8220;random group&#8221;, and many important properties of such groups are delineated. There is a parameter in the theory which governs the density of relations added to a generating set to determine the random group. The most striking aspect of the theory (in my opinion) is the existence of a phase transition. Gromov showed that if <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> is a random group at density <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=d&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="d" title="d" class="latex" /> then if <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=d+%3C+1%2F2&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="d &lt; 1/2" title="d &lt; 1/2" class="latex" />, with overwhelming probability, <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> is infinite, hyperbolic, torsion-free and of geometric dimension <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=2&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="2" title="2" class="latex" /> (i.e. it is not free, but admits a <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=2&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="2" title="2" class="latex" />-dimensional <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=K%28G%2C1%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="K(G,1)" title="K(G,1)" class="latex" />). However, if <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=d+%5Cge+1%2F2&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="d &#92;ge 1/2" title="d &#92;ge 1/2" class="latex" />, with overwhelming probability, <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> is either trivial or <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cmathbb%7BZ%7D%2F2%5Cmathbb%7BZ%7D&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;mathbb{Z}/2&#92;mathbb{Z}" title="&#92;mathbb{Z}/2&#92;mathbb{Z}" class="latex" />.</p>
<p><strong>Example</strong>: A group <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> which admits a finite dimensional <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=K%28G%2C1%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="K(G,1)" title="K(G,1)" class="latex" /> is torsion-free, and therefore either trivial or infinite. This follows from the fact that the <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=K%28%5Cmathbb%7BZ%7D%2Fp%5Cmathbb%7BZ%7D%2C1%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="K(&#92;mathbb{Z}/p&#92;mathbb{Z},1)" title="K(&#92;mathbb{Z}/p&#92;mathbb{Z},1)" class="latex" />&#8216;s are the infinite dimensional Lens spaces, which have nontrivial homology in infinitely many dimensions, together with elementary covering space theory. This example begs the question: how do you tell if a group has a finite dimensional <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=K%28G%2C1%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="K(G,1)" title="K(G,1)" class="latex" />? Well, one way is to exhibit a free, properly discontinuous action of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> on a finite dimensional contractible space; of course, given such an action, it is probably easier to directly find elements in <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> of infinite order. </p>
<p><strong>Example</strong>: A function <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=f%3AG+%5Cto+%5Cmathbb%7BR%7D%5E%2B&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="f:G &#92;to &#92;mathbb{R}^+" title="f:G &#92;to &#92;mathbb{R}^+" class="latex" /> is said to be a <em>length function</em> if it satisfies <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=f%28%5Ctext%7Bid%7D%29%3D0&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="f(&#92;text{id})=0" title="f(&#92;text{id})=0" class="latex" />, if it is symmetric (i.e. <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=f%28g%29+%3D+f%28g%5E%7B-1%7D%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="f(g) = f(g^{-1})" title="f(g) = f(g^{-1})" class="latex" /> for all <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=g&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="g" title="g" class="latex" />) and if it is subadditive: <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=f%28gh%29+%5Cle+f%28g%29+%2B+f%28h%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="f(gh) &#92;le f(g) + f(h)" title="f(gh) &#92;le f(g) + f(h)" class="latex" />. A group <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> is said to be <em>strongly bounded</em> if every length function on <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> is bounded. The strongly bounded property was introduced by George Bergman in <a href="http://arxiv.org/abs/math.GR/0401304">this paper</a>. A countable group is strongly bounded if and only if it is finite (the fact that finite groups are strongly bounded is obvious). Moreover, a group which admits an unbounded length function is evidently infinite. However, it turns out that there are many interesting uncountable but strongly bounded groups! Bergman showed that the group of permutations of any set is strongly bounded. Yves de Cornulier, in an appendix to <a href="http://arxiv.org/abs/math/0509701">a paper of mine</a> with Mike Freedman, showed that the same is true for <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=Homeo%28S%5En%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="Homeo(S^n)" title="Homeo(S^n)" class="latex" />, the group of homeomorphisms of an <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=n&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="n" title="n" class="latex" />-sphere.</p>
<p><strong>Example</strong>: One of the most spectacular proofs of the finiteness of a (certain class of) group(s) is Margulis&#8217; proof of the normal subgroup theorem, which says that if <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> is a lattice in a higher rank Lie group, then every normal subgroup <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=H&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="H" title="H" class="latex" /> in <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> is either finite, or of finite index. The proof has three steps: first, one shows that if <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=H&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="H" title="H" class="latex" /> is infinite, then <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G%2FH&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G/H" title="G/H" class="latex" /> is amenable. Second, since <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> has property <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%28T%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="(T)" title="(T)" class="latex" />, the same is true for <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G%2FH&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G/H" title="G/H" class="latex" />. Third, an amenable group with property <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%28T%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="(T)" title="(T)" class="latex" /> is finite. The second and third steps are not very complicated: a group has property <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%28T%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="(T)" title="(T)" class="latex" /> if the trivial representation is isolated in the space of all irreducible unitary representations, in a certain topology. A quotient of a group by a closed normal subgroup certainly has no more unitary representations than the original group itself, so the second step is not hard to show. An amenable group <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G%2FH&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G/H" title="G/H" class="latex" /> has almost invariant vectors in <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=L%5E2%28G%2FH%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="L^2(G/H)" title="L^2(G/H)" class="latex" />; since it has property <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%28T%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="(T)" title="(T)" class="latex" />, it has an invariant vector in <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=L%5E2%28G%2FH%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="L^2(G/H)" title="L^2(G/H)" class="latex" />; but this implies that <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G%2FH&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G/H" title="G/H" class="latex" /> is finite. So the hard part is to show that <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G%2FH&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G/H" title="G/H" class="latex" /> is amenable. This is done using what is now known as <em>boundary theory</em>, and is described in Chapter VI of <a href="http://www.ams.org/mathscinet-getitem?mr=1090825">Margulis&#8217; book</a>.</p>
<p>I would be curious to hear other people&#8217;s favorite tricks/techniques to show that a group is or is not infinite.</p>
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