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Arithmetic hyperbolic 3-manifold

In mathematics, more precisely in group theory and hyperbolic geometry, Arithmetic Kleinian groups are a special class of Kleinian groups constructed using orders in quaternion algebras. They are particular instances of arithmetic groups. An arithmetic hyperbolic three-manifold is the quotient of hyperbolic space by an arithmetic Kleinian group.

Definition and examples edit

Quaternion algebras edit

A quaternion algebra over a field   is a four-dimensional central simple  -algebra. A quaternion algebra has a basis   where   and  .

A quaternion algebra is said to be split over   if it is isomorphic as an  -algebra to the algebra of matrices  ; a quaternion algebra over an algebraically closed field is always split.

If   is an embedding of   into a field   we shall denote by   the algebra obtained by extending scalars from   to   where we view   as a subfield of   via  .

Arithmetic Kleinian groups edit

A subgroup of   is said to be derived from a quaternion algebra if it can be obtained through the following construction. Let   be a number field which has exactly two embeddings into   whose image is not contained in   (one conjugate to the other). Let   be a quaternion algebra over   such that for any embedding   the algebra   is isomorphic to the Hamilton quaternions. Next we need an order   in  . Let   be the group of elements in   of reduced norm 1 and let   be its image in   via  . We then consider the Kleinian group obtained as the image in   of  .

The main fact about these groups is that they are discrete subgroups and they have finite covolume for the Haar measure on  . Moreover, the construction above yields a cocompact subgroup if and only if the algebra   is not split over  . The discreteness is a rather immediate consequence of the fact that   is only split at its complex embeddings. The finiteness of covolume is harder to prove.[1]

An arithmetic Kleinian group is any subgroup of   which is commensurable to a group derived from a quaternion algebra. It follows immediately from this definition that arithmetic Kleinian groups are discrete and of finite covolume (this means that they are lattices in  ).

Examples edit

Examples are provided by taking   to be an imaginary quadratic field,   and   where   is the ring of integers of   (for example   and  ). The groups thus obtained are the Bianchi groups. They are not cocompact, and any arithmetic Kleinian group which is not commensurable to a conjugate of a Bianchi group is cocompact.

If   is any quaternion algebra over an imaginary quadratic number field   which is not isomorphic to a matrix algebra then the unit groups of orders in   are cocompact.

Trace field of arithmetic manifolds edit

The invariant trace field of a Kleinian group (or, through the monodromy image of the fundamental group, of an hyperbolic manifold) is the field generated by the traces of the squares of its elements. In the case of an arithmetic manifold whose fundamental groups is commensurable with that of a manifold derived from a quaternion algebra over a number field   the invariant trace field equals  .

One can in fact characterise arithmetic manifolds through the traces of the elements of their fundamental group. A Kleinian group is an arithmetic group if and only if the following three conditions are realised:

  • Its invariant trace field   is a number field with exactly one complex place;
  • The traces of its elements are algebraic integers;
  • For any   in the group,   and any embedding   we have  .

Geometry and spectrum of arithmetic hyperbolic three-manifolds edit

Volume formula edit

For the volume an arithmetic three manifold   derived from a maximal order in a quaternion algebra   over a number field   we have the expression:[2]

 
where   are the discriminants of   respectively,   is the Dedekind zeta function of   and  .

Finiteness results edit

A consequence of the volume formula in the previous paragraph is that

Given   there are at most finitely many arithmetic hyperbolic 3-manifolds with volume less than  .

This is in contrast with the fact that hyperbolic Dehn surgery can be used to produce infinitely many non-isometric hyperbolic 3-manifolds with bounded volume. In particular, a corollary is that given a cusped hyperbolic manifold, at most finitely many Dehn surgeries on it can yield an arithmetic hyperbolic manifold.

Remarkable arithmetic hyperbolic three-manifolds edit

The Weeks manifold is the hyperbolic three-manifold of smallest volume[3] and the Meyerhoff manifold is the one of next smallest volume.

The complement in the three-sphere of the figure-eight knot is an arithmetic hyperbolic three-manifold[4] and attains the smallest volume among all cusped hyperbolic three-manifolds.[5]

Spectrum and Ramanujan conjectures edit

The Ramanujan conjecture for automorphic forms on   over a number field would imply that for any congruence cover of an arithmetic three-manifold (derived from a quaternion algebra) the spectrum of the Laplace operator is contained in  .

Arithmetic manifolds in three-dimensional topology edit

Many of Thurston's conjectures (for example the virtually Haken conjecture), now all known to be true following the work of Ian Agol,[6] were checked first for arithmetic manifolds by using specific methods.[7] In some arithmetic cases the Virtual Haken conjecture is known by general means but it is not known if its solution can be arrived at by purely arithmetic means (for instance, by finding a congruence subgroup with positive first Betti number).

Arithmetic manifolds can be used to give examples of manifolds with large injectivity radius whose first Betti number vanishes.[8][9]

A remark by William Thurston is that arithmetic manifolds "...often seem to have special beauty."[10] This can be substantiated by results showing that the relation between topology and geometry for these manifolds is much more predictable than in general. For example:

  • For a given genus g there are at most finitely many arithmetic (congruence) hyperbolic 3-manifolds which fiber over the circle with a fiber of genus g.[11]
  • There are at most finitely many arithmetic (congruence) hyperbolic 3-manifolds with a given Heegaard genus.[12]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Maclachlan & Reid 2003, Theorem 8.1.2.
  2. ^ Maclachlan & Reid 2003, Theorem 11.1.3.
  3. ^ Milley, Peter (2009). "Minimum volume hyperbolic 3-manifolds". Journal of Topology. 2: 181–192. arXiv:0809.0346. doi:10.1112/jtopol/jtp006. MR 2499442. S2CID 3095292.
  4. ^ Riley, Robert (1975). "A quadratic parabolic group". Math. Proc. Cambridge Philos. Soc. 77 (2): 281–288. Bibcode:1975MPCPS..77..281R. doi:10.1017/s0305004100051094. MR 0412416.
  5. ^ Cao, Chun; Meyerhoff, G. Robert (2001). "The orientable cusped hyperbolic 3-manifolds of minimum volume". Invent. Math. 146 (3): 451–478. Bibcode:2001InMat.146..451C. doi:10.1007/s002220100167. MR 1869847. S2CID 123298695.
  6. ^ Agol, Ian (2013). "The virtual Haken conjecture". Documenta Mathematica. 18. With an appendix by Ian Agol, Daniel Groves, and Jason Manning: 1045–1087. MR 3104553.
  7. ^ Lackenby, Marc; Long, Darren D.; Reid, Alan W. (2008). "Covering spaces of arithmetic 3-orbifolds". International Mathematics Research Notices. 2008. arXiv:math/0601677. doi:10.1093/imrn/rnn036. MR 2426753.
  8. ^ Calegari, Frank; Dunfield, Nathan (2006). "Automorphic forms and rational homology 3-spheres". Geometry & Topology. 10: 295–329. arXiv:math/0508271. doi:10.2140/gt.2006.10.295. MR 2224458. S2CID 5506430.
  9. ^ Boston, Nigel; Ellenberg, Jordan (2006). "Pro-p groups and towers of rational homology spheres". Geometry & Topology. 10: 331–334. arXiv:0902.4567. doi:10.2140/gt.2006.10.331. MR 2224459. S2CID 14889934.
  10. ^ Thurston, William (1982). "Three-dimensional manifolds, Kleinian groups and hyperbolic geometry". Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society. 6 (3): 357–381. doi:10.1090/s0273-0979-1982-15003-0.
  11. ^ Biringer, Ian; Souto, Juan (2011). "A finiteness theorem for hyperbolic 3-manifolds". J. London Math. Soc. Second Series. 84: 227–242. arXiv:0901.0300. doi:10.1112/jlms/jdq106. S2CID 11488751.
  12. ^ Gromov, Misha; Guth, Larry (2012). "Generalizations of the Kolmogorov-Barzdin embedding estimates". Duke Math. J. 161 (13): 2549–2603. arXiv:1103.3423. doi:10.1215/00127094-1812840. S2CID 7295856.

References edit

  • Maclachlan, Colin; Reid, Alan W. (2003), The arithmetic of hyperbolic 3-manifolds, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, vol. 219, Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag, ISBN 978-0-387-98386-8, MR 1937957

arithmetic, hyperbolic, manifold, mathematics, more, precisely, group, theory, hyperbolic, geometry, arithmetic, kleinian, groups, special, class, kleinian, groups, constructed, using, orders, quaternion, algebras, they, particular, instances, arithmetic, grou. In mathematics more precisely in group theory and hyperbolic geometry Arithmetic Kleinian groups are a special class of Kleinian groups constructed using orders in quaternion algebras They are particular instances of arithmetic groups An arithmetic hyperbolic three manifold is the quotient of hyperbolic space H3 displaystyle mathbb H 3 by an arithmetic Kleinian group Contents 1 Definition and examples 1 1 Quaternion algebras 1 2 Arithmetic Kleinian groups 1 3 Examples 2 Trace field of arithmetic manifolds 3 Geometry and spectrum of arithmetic hyperbolic three manifolds 3 1 Volume formula 3 2 Finiteness results 3 3 Remarkable arithmetic hyperbolic three manifolds 3 4 Spectrum and Ramanujan conjectures 4 Arithmetic manifolds in three dimensional topology 5 Notes 6 ReferencesDefinition and examples editQuaternion algebras edit Main article Quaternion algebra A quaternion algebra over a field F displaystyle F nbsp is a four dimensional central simple F displaystyle F nbsp algebra A quaternion algebra has a basis 1 i j ij displaystyle 1 i j ij nbsp where i2 j2 F displaystyle i 2 j 2 in F times nbsp and ij ji displaystyle ij ji nbsp A quaternion algebra is said to be split over F displaystyle F nbsp if it is isomorphic as an F displaystyle F nbsp algebra to the algebra of matrices M2 F displaystyle M 2 F nbsp a quaternion algebra over an algebraically closed field is always split If s displaystyle sigma nbsp is an embedding of F displaystyle F nbsp into a field E displaystyle E nbsp we shall denote by A sE displaystyle A otimes sigma E nbsp the algebra obtained by extending scalars from F displaystyle F nbsp to E displaystyle E nbsp where we view F displaystyle F nbsp as a subfield of E displaystyle E nbsp via s displaystyle sigma nbsp Arithmetic Kleinian groups edit A subgroup of PGL2 C displaystyle mathrm PGL 2 mathbb C nbsp is said to be derived from a quaternion algebra if it can be obtained through the following construction Let F displaystyle F nbsp be a number field which has exactly two embeddings into C displaystyle mathbb C nbsp whose image is not contained in R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp one conjugate to the other Let A displaystyle A nbsp be a quaternion algebra over F displaystyle F nbsp such that for any embedding t F R displaystyle tau F to mathbb R nbsp the algebra A tR displaystyle A otimes tau mathbb R nbsp is isomorphic to the Hamilton quaternions Next we need an order O displaystyle mathcal O nbsp in A displaystyle A nbsp Let O1 displaystyle mathcal O 1 nbsp be the group of elements in O displaystyle mathcal O nbsp of reduced norm 1 and let G displaystyle Gamma nbsp be its image in M2 C displaystyle M 2 mathbb C nbsp via ϕ displaystyle phi nbsp We then consider the Kleinian group obtained as the image in PGL2 C displaystyle mathrm PGL 2 mathbb C nbsp of ϕ O1 displaystyle phi mathcal O 1 nbsp The main fact about these groups is that they are discrete subgroups and they have finite covolume for the Haar measure on PGL2 C displaystyle mathrm PGL 2 mathbb C nbsp Moreover the construction above yields a cocompact subgroup if and only if the algebra A displaystyle A nbsp is not split over F displaystyle F nbsp The discreteness is a rather immediate consequence of the fact that A displaystyle A nbsp is only split at its complex embeddings The finiteness of covolume is harder to prove 1 An arithmetic Kleinian group is any subgroup of PGL2 C displaystyle mathrm PGL 2 mathbb C nbsp which is commensurable to a group derived from a quaternion algebra It follows immediately from this definition that arithmetic Kleinian groups are discrete and of finite covolume this means that they are lattices in PGL2 C displaystyle mathrm PGL 2 mathbb C nbsp Examples edit Examples are provided by taking F displaystyle F nbsp to be an imaginary quadratic field A M2 F displaystyle A M 2 F nbsp and O M2 OF displaystyle mathcal O M 2 O F nbsp where OF displaystyle O F nbsp is the ring of integers of F displaystyle F nbsp for example F Q i displaystyle F mathbb Q i nbsp and OF Z i displaystyle O F mathbb Z i nbsp The groups thus obtained are the Bianchi groups They are not cocompact and any arithmetic Kleinian group which is not commensurable to a conjugate of a Bianchi group is cocompact If A displaystyle A nbsp is any quaternion algebra over an imaginary quadratic number field F displaystyle F nbsp which is not isomorphic to a matrix algebra then the unit groups of orders in A displaystyle A nbsp are cocompact Trace field of arithmetic manifolds editThe invariant trace field of a Kleinian group or through the monodromy image of the fundamental group of an hyperbolic manifold is the field generated by the traces of the squares of its elements In the case of an arithmetic manifold whose fundamental groups is commensurable with that of a manifold derived from a quaternion algebra over a number field F displaystyle F nbsp the invariant trace field equals F displaystyle F nbsp One can in fact characterise arithmetic manifolds through the traces of the elements of their fundamental group A Kleinian group is an arithmetic group if and only if the following three conditions are realised Its invariant trace field F displaystyle F nbsp is a number field with exactly one complex place The traces of its elements are algebraic integers For any g displaystyle gamma nbsp in the group t Trace g2 displaystyle t mathrm Trace gamma 2 nbsp and any embedding s F R displaystyle sigma F to mathbb R nbsp we have s t 2 displaystyle sigma t leq 2 nbsp Geometry and spectrum of arithmetic hyperbolic three manifolds editVolume formula edit For the volume an arithmetic three manifold M GO H3 displaystyle M Gamma mathcal O backslash mathbb H 3 nbsp derived from a maximal order in a quaternion algebra A displaystyle A nbsp over a number field f displaystyle f nbsp we have the expression 2 vol M 2 DF 32 zF 2 22r 1 p2r p DA N p 1 displaystyle mathrm vol M frac 2 D F frac 3 2 cdot zeta F 2 2 2r 1 cdot pi 2r cdot prod mathfrak p D A N mathfrak p 1 nbsp where DA DF displaystyle D A D F nbsp are the discriminants of A F displaystyle A F nbsp respectively zF displaystyle zeta F nbsp is the Dedekind zeta function of F displaystyle F nbsp and r F Q displaystyle r F mathbb Q nbsp Finiteness results edit A consequence of the volume formula in the previous paragraph is that Given v gt 0 displaystyle v gt 0 nbsp there are at most finitely many arithmetic hyperbolic 3 manifolds with volume less than v displaystyle v nbsp This is in contrast with the fact that hyperbolic Dehn surgery can be used to produce infinitely many non isometric hyperbolic 3 manifolds with bounded volume In particular a corollary is that given a cusped hyperbolic manifold at most finitely many Dehn surgeries on it can yield an arithmetic hyperbolic manifold Remarkable arithmetic hyperbolic three manifolds edit The Weeks manifold is the hyperbolic three manifold of smallest volume 3 and the Meyerhoff manifold is the one of next smallest volume The complement in the three sphere of the figure eight knot is an arithmetic hyperbolic three manifold 4 and attains the smallest volume among all cusped hyperbolic three manifolds 5 Spectrum and Ramanujan conjectures edit The Ramanujan conjecture for automorphic forms on GL 2 displaystyle mathrm GL 2 nbsp over a number field would imply that for any congruence cover of an arithmetic three manifold derived from a quaternion algebra the spectrum of the Laplace operator is contained in 1 displaystyle 1 infty nbsp Arithmetic manifolds in three dimensional topology editMany of Thurston s conjectures for example the virtually Haken conjecture now all known to be true following the work of Ian Agol 6 were checked first for arithmetic manifolds by using specific methods 7 In some arithmetic cases the Virtual Haken conjecture is known by general means but it is not known if its solution can be arrived at by purely arithmetic means for instance by finding a congruence subgroup with positive first Betti number Arithmetic manifolds can be used to give examples of manifolds with large injectivity radius whose first Betti number vanishes 8 9 A remark by William Thurston is that arithmetic manifolds often seem to have special beauty 10 This can be substantiated by results showing that the relation between topology and geometry for these manifolds is much more predictable than in general For example For a given genus g there are at most finitely many arithmetic congruence hyperbolic 3 manifolds which fiber over the circle with a fiber of genus g 11 There are at most finitely many arithmetic congruence hyperbolic 3 manifolds with a given Heegaard genus 12 Notes edit Maclachlan amp Reid 2003 Theorem 8 1 2 Maclachlan amp Reid 2003 Theorem 11 1 3 Milley Peter 2009 Minimum volume hyperbolic 3 manifolds Journal of Topology 2 181 192 arXiv 0809 0346 doi 10 1112 jtopol jtp006 MR 2499442 S2CID 3095292 Riley Robert 1975 A quadratic parabolic group Math Proc Cambridge Philos Soc 77 2 281 288 Bibcode 1975MPCPS 77 281R doi 10 1017 s0305004100051094 MR 0412416 Cao Chun Meyerhoff G Robert 2001 The orientable cusped hyperbolic 3 manifolds of minimum volume Invent Math 146 3 451 478 Bibcode 2001InMat 146 451C doi 10 1007 s002220100167 MR 1869847 S2CID 123298695 Agol Ian 2013 The virtual Haken conjecture Documenta Mathematica 18 With an appendix by Ian Agol Daniel Groves and Jason Manning 1045 1087 MR 3104553 Lackenby Marc Long Darren D Reid Alan W 2008 Covering spaces of arithmetic 3 orbifolds International Mathematics Research Notices 2008 arXiv math 0601677 doi 10 1093 imrn rnn036 MR 2426753 Calegari Frank Dunfield Nathan 2006 Automorphic forms and rational homology 3 spheres Geometry amp Topology 10 295 329 arXiv math 0508271 doi 10 2140 gt 2006 10 295 MR 2224458 S2CID 5506430 Boston Nigel Ellenberg Jordan 2006 Pro p groups and towers of rational homology spheres Geometry amp Topology 10 331 334 arXiv 0902 4567 doi 10 2140 gt 2006 10 331 MR 2224459 S2CID 14889934 Thurston William 1982 Three dimensional manifolds Kleinian groups and hyperbolic geometry Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society 6 3 357 381 doi 10 1090 s0273 0979 1982 15003 0 Biringer Ian Souto Juan 2011 A finiteness theorem for hyperbolic 3 manifolds J London Math Soc Second Series 84 227 242 arXiv 0901 0300 doi 10 1112 jlms jdq106 S2CID 11488751 Gromov Misha Guth Larry 2012 Generalizations of the Kolmogorov Barzdin embedding estimates Duke Math J 161 13 2549 2603 arXiv 1103 3423 doi 10 1215 00127094 1812840 S2CID 7295856 References editMaclachlan Colin Reid Alan W 2003 The arithmetic of hyperbolic 3 manifolds Graduate Texts in Mathematics vol 219 Berlin New York Springer Verlag ISBN 978 0 387 98386 8 MR 1937957 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Arithmetic hyperbolic 3 manifold amp oldid 1216132563, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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