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Dehn function

In the mathematical subject of geometric group theory, a Dehn function, named after Max Dehn, is an optimal function associated to a finite group presentation which bounds the area of a relation in that group (that is a freely reduced word in the generators representing the identity element of the group) in terms of the length of that relation (see pp. 79–80 in [1]). The growth type of the Dehn function is a quasi-isometry invariant of a finitely presented group. The Dehn function of a finitely presented group is also closely connected with non-deterministic algorithmic complexity of the word problem in groups. In particular, a finitely presented group has solvable word problem if and only if the Dehn function for a finite presentation of this group is recursive (see Theorem 2.1 in [1]). The notion of a Dehn function is motivated by isoperimetric problems in geometry, such as the classic isoperimetric inequality for the Euclidean plane and, more generally, the notion of a filling area function that estimates the area of a minimal surface in a Riemannian manifold in terms of the length of the boundary curve of that surface.

History

The idea of an isoperimetric function for a finitely presented group goes back to the work of Max Dehn in 1910s. Dehn proved that the word problem for the standard presentation of the fundamental group of a closed oriented surface of genus at least two is solvable by what is now called Dehn's algorithm. A direct consequence of this fact is that for this presentation the Dehn function satisfies Dehn(n) ≤ n. This result was extended in 1960s by Martin Greendlinger to finitely presented groups satisfying the C'(1/6) small cancellation condition.[2] The formal notion of an isoperimetric function and a Dehn function as it is used today appeared in late 1980s – early 1990s together with the introduction and development of the theory of word-hyperbolic groups. In his 1987 monograph "Hyperbolic groups"[3] Gromov proved that a finitely presented group is word-hyperbolic if and only if it satisfies a linear isoperimetric inequality, that is, if and only if the Dehn function of this group is equivalent to the function f(n) = n. Gromov's proof was in large part informed by analogy with filling area functions for compact Riemannian manifolds where the area of a minimal surface bounding a null-homotopic closed curve is bounded in terms of the length of that curve.

The study of isoperimetric and Dehn functions quickly developed into a separate major theme in geometric group theory, especially since the growth types of these functions are natural quasi-isometry invariants of finitely presented groups. One of the major results in the subject was obtained by Sapir, Birget and Rips who showed[4] that most "reasonable" time complexity functions of Turing machines can be realized, up to natural equivalence, as Dehn functions of finitely presented groups.

Formal definition

Let

 

be a finite group presentation where the X is a finite alphabet and where R ⊆ F(X) is a finite set of cyclically reduced words.

Area of a relation

Let w ∈ F(X) be a relation in G, that is, a freely reduced word such that w = 1 in G. Note that this is equivalent to saying that w belongs to the normal closure of R in F(X), that is, there exists a representation of w as

    (♠)

where m ≥ 0 and where ri ∈ R± 1 for i = 1, ..., m.

For w ∈ F(X) satisfying w = 1 in G, the area of w with respect to (∗), denoted Area(w), is the smallest m ≥ 0 such that there exists a representation (♠) for w as the product in F(X) of m conjugates of elements of R± 1.

A freely reduced word w ∈ F(X) satisfies w = 1 in G if and only if the loop labeled by w in the presentation complex for G corresponding to (∗) is null-homotopic. This fact can be used to show that Area(w) is the smallest number of 2-cells in a van Kampen diagram over (∗) with boundary cycle labelled by w.

Isoperimetric function

An isoperimetric function for a finite presentation (∗) is a monotone non-decreasing function

 

such that whenever w ∈ F(X) is a freely reduced word satisfying w = 1 in G, then

Area(w) ≤ f(|w|),

where |w| is the length of the word w.

Dehn function

Then the Dehn function of a finite presentation (∗) is defined as

 

Equivalently, Dehn(n) is the smallest isoperimetric function for (∗), that is, Dehn(n) is an isoperimetric function for (∗) and for any other isoperimetric function f(n) we have

Dehn(n) ≤ f(n)

for every n ≥ 0.

Growth types of functions

Because the exact Dehn function usually depends on the presentation, one usually studies its asymptotic growth type as n tends to infinity, which only depends on the group.

For two monotone-nondecreasing functions

 

one says that f is dominated by g if there exists C ≥1 such that

 

for every integer n ≥ 0. Say that f ≈ g if f is dominated by g and g is dominated by f. Then ≈ is an equivalence relation and Dehn functions and isoperimetric functions are usually studied up to this equivalence relation. Thus for any a,b > 1 we have an ≈ bn. Similarly, if f(n) is a polynomial of degree d (where d ≥ 1 is a real number) with non-negative coefficients, then f(n) ≈ nd. Also, 1 ≈ n.

If a finite group presentation admits an isoperimetric function f(n) that is equivalent to a linear (respectively, quadratic, cubic, polynomial, exponential, etc.) function in n, the presentation is said to satisfy a linear (respectively, quadratic, cubic, polynomial, exponential, etc.) isoperimetric inequality.

Basic properties

  • If G and H are quasi-isometric finitely presented groups and some finite presentation of G has an isoperimetric function f(n) then for any finite presentation of H there is an isoperimetric function equivalent to f(n). In particular, this fact holds for G = H, where the same group is given by two different finite presentations.
  • Consequently, for a finitely presented group the growth type of its Dehn function, in the sense of the above definition, does not depend on the choice of a finite presentation for that group. More generally, if two finitely presented groups are quasi-isometric then their Dehn functions are equivalent.
  • For a finitely presented group G given by a finite presentation (∗) the following conditions are equivalent:
    • G has a recursive Dehn function with respect to (∗).
    • There exists a recursive isoperimetric function f(n) for (∗).
    • The group G has solvable word problem.
In particular, this implies that solvability of the word problem is a quasi-isometry invariant for finitely presented groups.
  • Knowing the area Area(w) of a relation w allows to bound, in terms of |w|, not only the number of conjugates of the defining relations in (♠) but the lengths of the conjugating elements ui as well. As a consequence, it is known[1][5] that if a finitely presented group G given by a finite presentation (∗) has computable Dehn function Dehn(n), then the word problem for G is solvable with non-deterministic time complexity Dehn(n) and deterministic time complexity Exp(Dehn(n)). However, in general there is no reasonable bound on the Dehn function of a finitely presented group in terms of the deterministic time complexity of the word problem and the gap between the two functions can be quite large.

Examples

  • For any finite presentation of a finite group G we have Dehn(n) ≈ n.[6]
  • For the closed oriented surface of genus 2, the standard presentation of its fundamental group
 
satisfies Dehn(n) ≤ n and Dehn(n) ≈ n.
 
has Dehn(n) ≈ 2n (see [7]).
 
satisfies a cubic but no quadratic isoperimetric inequality.[8]
  • Higher-dimensional Heisenberg groups
 ,
where k ≥ 2, satisfy quadratic isoperimetric inequalities.[9]
  • If G is a "Novikov-Boone group", that is, a finitely presented group with unsolvable word problem, then the Dehn function of G growths faster than any recursive function.
  • For the Thompson group F the Dehn function is quadratic, that is, equivalent to n2 (see [10]).
  • The so-called Baumslag-Gersten group
 
has a Dehn function growing faster than any fixed iterated tower of exponentials. Specifically, for this group
Dehn(n) ≈ exp(exp(exp(...(exp(1))...)))
where the number of exponentials is equal to the integral part of log2(n) (see [1][11]).

Known results

  • A finitely presented group is word-hyperbolic group if and only if its Dehn function is equivalent to n, that is, if and only if every finite presentation of this group satisfies a linear isoperimetric inequality.[3]
  • Isoperimetric gap: If a finitely presented group satisfies a subquadratic isoperimetric inequality then it is word-hyperbolic.[3][12][13] Thus there are no finitely presented groups with Dehn functions equivalent to nd with d ∈ (1,2).
  • Automatic groups and, more generally, combable groups satisfy quadratic isoperimetric inequalities.[8]
  • A finitely generated nilpotent group has a Dehn function equivalent to nd where d ≥ 1 and all positive integers d are realized in this way. Moreover, every finitely generated nilpotent group G admits a polynomial isoperimetric inequality of degree c + 1, where c is the nilpotency class of G.[14]
  • The set of real numbers d ≥ 1, such that there exists a finitely presented group with Dehn function equivalent to nd, is dense in the interval  .[15]
  • If all asymptotic cones of a finitely presented group are simply connected, then the group satisfies a polynomial isoperimetric inequality.[16]
  • If a finitely presented group satisfies a quadratic isoperimetric inequality, then all asymptotic cones of this group are simply connected.[17]
  • If (M,g) is a closed Riemannian manifold and G = π1(M) then the Dehn function of G is equivalent to the filling area function of the manifold.[18]
  • If G is a group acting properly discontinuously and cocompactly by isometries on a CAT(0) space, then G satisfies a quadratic isoperimetric inequality.[19] In particular, this applies to the case where G is the fundamental group of a closed Riemannian manifold of non-positive sectional curvature (not necessarily constant).
  • The Dehn function of SL(m, Z) is at most exponential for any m ≥ 3.[20] For SL(3,Z) this bound is sharp and it is known in that case that the Dehn function does not admit a subexponential upper bound.[8] The Dehn functions for SL(m,Z), where m > 4 are quadratic.[21] The Dehn function of SL(4,Z), has been conjectured to be quadratic, by Thurston. This and, more generally, Gromov's conjecture that lattices in higher rank Lie groups have a quadratic Dehn function has been proved by Leuzinger and Young.[22]
  • Mapping class groups of surfaces of finite type are automatic and satisfy quadratic isoperimetric inequalities.[23]
  • The Dehn functions for the groups Aut(Fk) and Out(Fk) are exponential for every k ≥ 3. Exponential isoperimetric inequalities for Aut(Fk) and Out(Fk) when k ≥ 3 were found by Hatcher and Vogtmann.[24] These bounds are sharp, and the groups Aut(Fk) and Out(Fk) do not satisfy subexponential isoperimetric inequalities, as shown for k = 3 by Bridson and Vogtmann,[25] and for k ≥ 4 by Handel and Mosher. [26]
  • For every automorphism φ of a finitely generated free group Fk the mapping torus group   of φ satisfies a quadratic isoperimetric inequality.[27]
  • Most "reasonable" computable functions that are ≥n4, can be realized, up to equivalence, as Dehn functions of finitely presented groups. In particular, if f(n) ≥ n4 is a superadditive function whose binary representation is computable in time   by a Turing machine then f(n) is equivalent to the Dehn function of a finitely presented group.
  • Although one cannot reasonably bound the Dehn function of a group in terms of the complexity of its word problem, Birget, Olʹshanskii, Rips and Sapir obtained the following result,[28] providing a far-reaching generalization of Higman's embedding theorem: The word problem of a finitely generated group is decidable in nondeterministic polynomial time if and only if this group can be embedded into a finitely presented group with a polynomial isoperimetric function. Moreover, every group with the word problem solvable in time T(n) can be embedded into a group with isoperimetric function equivalent to n2T(n2)4.

Generalizations

  • There are several companion notions closely related to the notion of an isoperimetric function. Thus an isodiametric function[29] bounds the smallest diameter (with respect to the simplicial metric where every edge has length one) of a van Kampen diagram for a particular relation w in terms of the length of w. A filling length function the smallest filling length of a van Kampen diagram for a particular relation w in terms of the length of w. Here the filling length of a diagram is the minimum, over all combinatorial null-homotopies of the diagram, of the maximal length of intermediate loops bounding intermediate diagrams along such null-homotopies.[30] The filling length function is closely related to the non-deterministic space complexity of the word problem for finitely presented groups. There are several general inequalities connecting the Dehn function, the optimal isodiametric function and the optimal filling length function, but the precise relationship between them is not yet understood.
  • There are also higher-dimensional generalizations of isoperimetric and Dehn functions.[31] For k ≥ 1 the k-dimensional isoperimetric function of a group bounds the minimal combinatorial volume of (k + 1)-dimensional ball-fillings of k-spheres mapped into a k-connected space on which the group acts properly and cocompactly; the bound is given as a function of the combinatorial volume of the k-sphere. The standard notion of an isoperimetric function corresponds to the case k = 1. Compared to the classical case only little is known about these higher dimensional filling functions. One chief result is that lattices in higher rank semisimple Lie groups are undistorted in dimensions below the rank, i.e. they satisfy the same filling functions as their associated symmetric space.[32]
  • In his monograph Asymptotic invariants of infinite groups[33] Gromov proposed a probabilistic or averaged version of Dehn function and suggested that for many groups averaged Dehn functions should have strictly slower asymptotics than the standard Dehn functions. More precise treatments of the notion of an averaged Dehn function or mean Dehn function were given later by other researchers who also proved that indeed averaged Dehn functions are subasymptotic to standard Dehn functions in a number of cases (such as nilpotent and abelian groups).[34][35][36]
  • A relative version of the notion of an isoperimetric function plays a central role in Osin' approach to relatively hyperbolic groups.[37]
  • Grigorchuk and Ivanov explored several natural generalizations of Dehn function for group presentations on finitely many generators but with infinitely many defining relations.[38]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d S. M. Gersten, Isoperimetric and isodiametric functions of finite presentations. Geometric group theory, Vol. 1 (Sussex, 1991), pp. 79–96, London Math. Soc. Lecture Note Ser., 181, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1993.
  2. ^ Martin Greendlinger, Dehn's algorithm for the word problem. Communications on Pure and Applied Mathematics, vol. 13 (1960), pp. 67–83.
  3. ^ a b c M. Gromov, Hyperbolic Groups in: "Essays in Group Theory" (G. M. Gersten, ed.), MSRI Publ. 8, 1987, pp. 75–263. ISBN 0-387-96618-8.MR0919829
  4. ^ M. Sapir, J.-C. Birget, E. Rips. Isoperimetric and isodiametric functions of groups. Annals of Mathematics (2), vol 156 (2002), no. 2, pp. 345–466.
  5. ^ Juan M. Alonso, Inégalités isopérimétriques et quasi-isométries. Comptes Rendus de l'Académie des Sciences, Série I, vol. 311 (1990), no. 12, pp. 761–764.
  6. ^ a b Martin R. Bridson. The geometry of the word problem. Invitations to geometry and topology, pp. 29–91, Oxford Graduate Texts in Mathematics, 7, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2002. ISBN 0-19-850772-0.
  7. ^ S. M. Gersten, Dehn functions and l1-norms of finite presentations. Algorithms and classification in combinatorial group theory (Berkeley, CA, 1989), pp. 195–224, Math. Sci. Res. Inst. Publ., 23, Springer, New York, 1992. ISBN 0-387-97685-X.
  8. ^ a b c D. B. A. Epstein, J. W. Cannon, D. Holt, S. Levy, M. Paterson, W. Thurston. Word Processing in Groups. Jones and Bartlett Publishers, Boston, MA, 1992. ISBN 0-86720-244-0 MR1161694
  9. ^ D. Allcock, An isoperimetric inequality for the Heisenberg groups. Geometric and Functional Analysis, vol. 8 (1998), no. 2, pp. 219–233.
  10. ^ V. S. Guba, The Dehn function of Richard Thompson's group F is quadratic. Inventiones Mathematicae, vol. 163 (2006), no. 2, pp. 313–342.
  11. ^ A. N. Platonov, An isoparametric function of the Baumslag-Gersten group. (in Russian.) Vestnik Moskov. Univ. Ser. I Mat. Mekh. 2004, , no. 3, pp. 12–17; translation in: Moscow University Mathematics Bulletin, vol. 59 (2004), no. 3, pp. 12–17 (2005).
  12. ^ A. Yu. Olʹshanskii. Hyperbolicity of groups with subquadratic isoperimetric inequality. International Journal of Algebra and Computation, vol. 1 (1991), no. 3, pp. 281–289. MR1148230doi:10.1142/S0218196791000183
  13. ^ B. H. Bowditch. A short proof that a subquadratic isoperimetric inequality implies a linear one. Michigan Mathematical Journal, vol. 42 (1995), no. 1, pp. 103–107. MR1322192doi:10.1307/mmj/1029005156
  14. ^ S. M. Gersten, D. F. Holt, T. R. Riley, Isoperimetric inequalities for nilpotent groups. Geometric and Functional Analysis, vol. 13 (2003), no. 4, pp. 795–814. MR2006557doi:10.1007/s00039-003-0430-y
  15. ^ N. Brady and M. R. Bridson, There is only one gap in the isoperimetric spectrum. Geometric and Functional Analysis, vol. 10 (2000), no. 5, pp. 1053–1070.
  16. ^ M. Gromov, Asymptotic invariants of infinite groups, in: "Geometric Group Theory", Vol. 2 (Sussex, 1991), London Mathematical Society Lecture Note Series, 182, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1993, pp. 1–295.
  17. ^ P. Papasoglu. On the asymptotic cone of groups satisfying a quadratic isoperimetric inequality. 2011-05-23 at the Wayback Machine Journal of Differential Geometry, vol. 44 (1996), no. 4, pp. 789–806.
  18. ^ J. Burillo and J. Taback. Equivalence of geometric and combinatorial Dehn functions. New York Journal of Mathematics, vol. 8 (2002), pp. 169–179.
  19. ^ M. R. Bridson and A. Haefliger, Metric spaces of non-positive curvature. Grundlehren der Mathematischen Wissenschaften [Fundamental Principles of Mathematical Sciences], vol. 319. Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1999. ISBN 3-540-64324-9; Remark 1.7, p. 444.
  20. ^ E. Leuzinger. On polyhedral retracts and compactifications of locally symmetric spaces. Differential Geometry and its Applications, vol. 20 (2004), pp. 293–318.
  21. ^ Robert Young, The Dehn function of SL(n;Z). Annals of Mathematics (2), vol. 177 (2013) no.3, pp. 969–1027.
  22. ^ E. Leuzinger and R. Young, Filling functions of arithmetic groups. Annals of Mathematics, vol. 193 (2021), pp. 733–792.
  23. ^ Lee Mosher, Mapping class groups are automatic. Annals of Mathematics (2), vol. 142 (1995), no. 2, pp. 303–384.
  24. ^ Allen Hatcher and Karen Vogtmann, Isoperimetric inequalities for automorphism groups of free groups. Pacific Journal of Mathematics, vol. 173 (1996), no. 2, 425–441.
  25. ^ Martin R. Bridson and Karen Vogtmann, On the geometry of the automorphism group of a free group. Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society, vol. 27 (1995), no. 6, pp. 544–552.
  26. ^ Michael Handel and Lee Mosher, Lipschitz retraction and distortion for subgroups of Out(Fn). Geometry & Topology, vol. 17 (2013), no. 3, pp. 1535–1579. MR3073930doi:10.2140/gt.2013.17.1535
  27. ^ Martin R. Bridson and Daniel Groves. The quadratic isoperimetric inequality for mapping tori of free-group automorphisms. Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society, vol 203 (2010), no. 955.
  28. ^ J.-C. Birget, A. Yu. Ol'shanskii, E. Rips, M. Sapir. Isoperimetric functions of groups and computational complexity of the word problem. Annals of Mathematics (2), vol 156 (2002), no. 2, pp. 467–518.
  29. ^ S. M. Gersten, The double exponential theorem for isodiametric and isoperimetric functions. International Journal of Algebra and Computation, vol. 1 (1991), no. 3, pp. 321–327.
  30. ^ S. M. Gersten and T. Riley, Filling length in finitely presentable groups. Dedicated to John Stallings on the occasion of his 65th birthday. Geometriae Dedicata, vol. 92 (2002), pp. 41–58.
  31. ^ J. M. Alonso, X. Wang and S. J. Pride, Higher-dimensional isoperimetric (or Dehn) functions of groups.[permanent dead link] Journal of Group Theory, vol. 2 (1999), no. 1, pp. 81–112.
  32. ^ E. Leuzinger and R. Young, Filling functions of arithmetic groups. Annals of Mathematics, vol. 193 (2021), pp. 733–792.
  33. ^ M. Gromov, Asymptotic invariants of infinite groups, in: "Geometric Group Theory", Vol. 2 (Sussex, 1991), London Mathematical Society Lecture Note Series, 182, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1993, pp. 1–295.
  34. ^ O. Bogopolskii and E. Ventura. The mean Dehn functions of abelian groups.[permanent dead link]Journal of Group Theory, vol. 11 (2008), no. 4, pp. 569–586.
  35. ^ Robert Young. Averaged Dehn functions for nilpotent groups. Topology, vol. 47 (2008), no. 5, pp. 351–367.
  36. ^ E. G. Kukina and V. A. Roman'kov. Subquadratic Growth of the Averaged Dehn Function for Free Abelian Groups. Siberian Mathematical Journal, vol. 44 (2003), no. 4, 1573–9260.
  37. ^ Densi Osin. Relatively Hyperbolic Groups: Intrinsic Geometry, Algebraic Properties, and Algorithmic Problems. Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society, vol. 179 (2006), no. 843. American Mathematical Society. ISBN 978-0-8218-3821-1.
  38. ^ R. I. Grigorchuk and S. V. Ivanov, On Dehn Functions of Infinite Presentations of Groups, Geometric and Functional Analysis, vol. 18 (2009), no. 6, pp. 1841–1874

Further reading

  • Noel Brady, Tim Riley and Hamish Short. The Geometry of the Word Problem for Finitely Generated Groups. Advanced Courses in Mathematics CRM Barcelona, Birkhäuser, Basel, 2007. ISBN 3-7643-7949-9.
  • Martin R. Bridson. The geometry of the word problem. Invitations to geometry and topology, pp. 29–91, Oxford Graduate Texts in Mathematics, 7, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2002. ISBN 0-19-850772-0.

External links

dehn, function, confused, with, dehn, invariant, mathematical, subject, geometric, group, theory, named, after, dehn, optimal, function, associated, finite, group, presentation, which, bounds, area, relation, that, group, that, freely, reduced, word, generator. Not to be confused with Dehn invariant In the mathematical subject of geometric group theory a Dehn function named after Max Dehn is an optimal function associated to a finite group presentation which bounds the area of a relation in that group that is a freely reduced word in the generators representing the identity element of the group in terms of the length of that relation see pp 79 80 in 1 The growth type of the Dehn function is a quasi isometry invariant of a finitely presented group The Dehn function of a finitely presented group is also closely connected with non deterministic algorithmic complexity of the word problem in groups In particular a finitely presented group has solvable word problem if and only if the Dehn function for a finite presentation of this group is recursive see Theorem 2 1 in 1 The notion of a Dehn function is motivated by isoperimetric problems in geometry such as the classic isoperimetric inequality for the Euclidean plane and more generally the notion of a filling area function that estimates the area of a minimal surface in a Riemannian manifold in terms of the length of the boundary curve of that surface Contents 1 History 2 Formal definition 2 1 Area of a relation 2 2 Isoperimetric function 2 3 Dehn function 2 4 Growth types of functions 3 Basic properties 4 Examples 5 Known results 6 Generalizations 7 See also 8 Notes 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory EditThe idea of an isoperimetric function for a finitely presented group goes back to the work of Max Dehn in 1910s Dehn proved that the word problem for the standard presentation of the fundamental group of a closed oriented surface of genus at least two is solvable by what is now called Dehn s algorithm A direct consequence of this fact is that for this presentation the Dehn function satisfies Dehn n n This result was extended in 1960s by Martin Greendlinger to finitely presented groups satisfying the C 1 6 small cancellation condition 2 The formal notion of an isoperimetric function and a Dehn function as it is used today appeared in late 1980s early 1990s together with the introduction and development of the theory of word hyperbolic groups In his 1987 monograph Hyperbolic groups 3 Gromov proved that a finitely presented group is word hyperbolic if and only if it satisfies a linear isoperimetric inequality that is if and only if the Dehn function of this group is equivalent to the function f n n Gromov s proof was in large part informed by analogy with filling area functions for compact Riemannian manifolds where the area of a minimal surface bounding a null homotopic closed curve is bounded in terms of the length of that curve The study of isoperimetric and Dehn functions quickly developed into a separate major theme in geometric group theory especially since the growth types of these functions are natural quasi isometry invariants of finitely presented groups One of the major results in the subject was obtained by Sapir Birget and Rips who showed 4 that most reasonable time complexity functions of Turing machines can be realized up to natural equivalence as Dehn functions of finitely presented groups Formal definition EditLet G X R displaystyle G langle X R rangle qquad be a finite group presentation where the X is a finite alphabet and where R F X is a finite set of cyclically reduced words Area of a relation Edit Let w F X be a relation in G that is a freely reduced word such that w 1 in G Note that this is equivalent to saying that w belongs to the normal closure of R in F X that is there exists a representation of w as w u 1 r 1 u 1 1 u m r m u m 1 in F X displaystyle w u 1 r 1 u 1 1 cdots u m r m u m 1 text in F X where m 0 and where ri R 1 for i 1 m For w F X satisfying w 1 in G the area of w with respect to denoted Area w is the smallest m 0 such that there exists a representation for w as the product in F X of m conjugates of elements of R 1 A freely reduced word w F X satisfies w 1 in G if and only if the loop labeled by w in the presentation complex for G corresponding to is null homotopic This fact can be used to show that Area w is the smallest number of 2 cells in a van Kampen diagram over with boundary cycle labelled by w Isoperimetric function Edit An isoperimetric function for a finite presentation is a monotone non decreasing function f N 0 displaystyle f mathbb N to 0 infty such that whenever w F X is a freely reduced word satisfying w 1 in G then Area w f w where w is the length of the word w Dehn function Edit Then the Dehn function of a finite presentation is defined as D e h n n max A r e a w w 1 in G w n w freely reduced displaystyle rm Dehn n max rm Area w w 1 text in G w leq n w text freely reduced Equivalently Dehn n is the smallest isoperimetric function for that is Dehn n is an isoperimetric function for and for any other isoperimetric function f n we have Dehn n f n for every n 0 Growth types of functions Edit Because the exact Dehn function usually depends on the presentation one usually studies its asymptotic growth type as n tends to infinity which only depends on the group For two monotone nondecreasing functions f g N 0 displaystyle f g mathbb N to 0 infty one says that f is dominated by g if there exists C 1 such that f n C g C n C C n C displaystyle f n leq Cg Cn C Cn C for every integer n 0 Say that f g if f is dominated by g and g is dominated by f Then is an equivalence relation and Dehn functions and isoperimetric functions are usually studied up to this equivalence relation Thus for any a b gt 1 we have an bn Similarly if f n is a polynomial of degree d where d 1 is a real number with non negative coefficients then f n nd Also 1 n If a finite group presentation admits an isoperimetric function f n that is equivalent to a linear respectively quadratic cubic polynomial exponential etc function in n the presentation is said to satisfy a linear respectively quadratic cubic polynomial exponential etc isoperimetric inequality Basic properties EditIf G and H are quasi isometric finitely presented groups and some finite presentation of G has an isoperimetric function f n then for any finite presentation of H there is an isoperimetric function equivalent to f n In particular this fact holds for G H where the same group is given by two different finite presentations Consequently for a finitely presented group the growth type of its Dehn function in the sense of the above definition does not depend on the choice of a finite presentation for that group More generally if two finitely presented groups are quasi isometric then their Dehn functions are equivalent For a finitely presented group G given by a finite presentation the following conditions are equivalent G has a recursive Dehn function with respect to There exists a recursive isoperimetric function f n for The group G has solvable word problem In particular this implies that solvability of the word problem is a quasi isometry invariant for finitely presented groups dd Knowing the area Area w of a relation w allows to bound in terms of w not only the number of conjugates of the defining relations in but the lengths of the conjugating elements ui as well As a consequence it is known 1 5 that if a finitely presented group G given by a finite presentation has computable Dehn function Dehn n then the word problem for G is solvable with non deterministic time complexity Dehn n and deterministic time complexity Exp Dehn n However in general there is no reasonable bound on the Dehn function of a finitely presented group in terms of the deterministic time complexity of the word problem and the gap between the two functions can be quite large Examples EditFor any finite presentation of a finite group G we have Dehn n n 6 For the closed oriented surface of genus 2 the standard presentation of its fundamental groupG a 1 a 2 b 1 b 2 a 1 b 1 a 2 b 2 1 displaystyle G langle a 1 a 2 b 1 b 2 a 1 b 1 a 2 b 2 1 rangle satisfies Dehn n n and Dehn n n For every integer k 2 the free abelian group Z k displaystyle mathbb Z k has Dehn n n2 6 The Baumslag Solitar groupB 1 2 a b b 1 a b a 2 displaystyle B 1 2 langle a b b 1 ab a 2 rangle has Dehn n 2n see 7 The 3 dimensional discrete Heisenberg groupH 3 a b t a t b t 1 a b t 2 displaystyle H 3 langle a b t a t b t 1 a b t 2 rangle satisfies a cubic but no quadratic isoperimetric inequality 8 Higher dimensional Heisenberg groupsH 2 k 1 a 1 b 1 a k b k t a i b i t a i t b i t 1 i 1 k a i b j 1 i j displaystyle H 2k 1 langle a 1 b 1 dots a k b k t a i b i t a i t b i t 1 i 1 dots k a i b j 1 i neq j rangle where k 2 satisfy quadratic isoperimetric inequalities 9 If G is a Novikov Boone group that is a finitely presented group with unsolvable word problem then the Dehn function of G growths faster than any recursive function For the Thompson group F the Dehn function is quadratic that is equivalent to n2 see 10 The so called Baumslag Gersten groupG a t t 1 a 1 t a t 1 a t a 2 displaystyle G langle a t t 1 a 1 t a t 1 at a 2 rangle dd has a Dehn function growing faster than any fixed iterated tower of exponentials Specifically for this groupDehn n exp exp exp exp 1 dd where the number of exponentials is equal to the integral part of log2 n see 1 11 Known results EditA finitely presented group is word hyperbolic group if and only if its Dehn function is equivalent to n that is if and only if every finite presentation of this group satisfies a linear isoperimetric inequality 3 Isoperimetric gap If a finitely presented group satisfies a subquadratic isoperimetric inequality then it is word hyperbolic 3 12 13 Thus there are no finitely presented groups with Dehn functions equivalent to nd with d 1 2 Automatic groups and more generally combable groups satisfy quadratic isoperimetric inequalities 8 A finitely generated nilpotent group has a Dehn function equivalent to nd where d 1 and all positive integers d are realized in this way Moreover every finitely generated nilpotent group G admits a polynomial isoperimetric inequality of degree c 1 where c is the nilpotency class of G 14 The set of real numbers d 1 such that there exists a finitely presented group with Dehn function equivalent to nd is dense in the interval 2 displaystyle 2 infty 15 If all asymptotic cones of a finitely presented group are simply connected then the group satisfies a polynomial isoperimetric inequality 16 If a finitely presented group satisfies a quadratic isoperimetric inequality then all asymptotic cones of this group are simply connected 17 If M g is a closed Riemannian manifold and G p1 M then the Dehn function of G is equivalent to the filling area function of the manifold 18 If G is a group acting properly discontinuously and cocompactly by isometries on a CAT 0 space then G satisfies a quadratic isoperimetric inequality 19 In particular this applies to the case where G is the fundamental group of a closed Riemannian manifold of non positive sectional curvature not necessarily constant The Dehn function of SL m Z is at most exponential for any m 3 20 For SL 3 Z this bound is sharp and it is known in that case that the Dehn function does not admit a subexponential upper bound 8 The Dehn functions for SL m Z where m gt 4 are quadratic 21 The Dehn function of SL 4 Z has been conjectured to be quadratic by Thurston This and more generally Gromov s conjecture that lattices in higher rank Lie groups have a quadratic Dehn function has been proved by Leuzinger and Young 22 Mapping class groups of surfaces of finite type are automatic and satisfy quadratic isoperimetric inequalities 23 The Dehn functions for the groups Aut Fk and Out Fk are exponential for every k 3 Exponential isoperimetric inequalities for Aut Fk and Out Fk when k 3 were found by Hatcher and Vogtmann 24 These bounds are sharp and the groups Aut Fk and Out Fk do not satisfy subexponential isoperimetric inequalities as shown for k 3 by Bridson and Vogtmann 25 and for k 4 by Handel and Mosher 26 For every automorphism f of a finitely generated free group Fk the mapping torus group F k ϕ Z displaystyle F k rtimes phi mathbb Z of f satisfies a quadratic isoperimetric inequality 27 Most reasonable computable functions that are n4 can be realized up to equivalence as Dehn functions of finitely presented groups In particular if f n n4 is a superadditive function whose binary representation is computable in time O f n 4 displaystyle O left sqrt 4 f n right by a Turing machine then f n is equivalent to the Dehn function of a finitely presented group Although one cannot reasonably bound the Dehn function of a group in terms of the complexity of its word problem Birget Olʹshanskii Rips and Sapir obtained the following result 28 providing a far reaching generalization of Higman s embedding theorem The word problem of a finitely generated group is decidable in nondeterministic polynomial time if and only if this group can be embedded into a finitely presented group with a polynomial isoperimetric function Moreover every group with the word problem solvable in time T n can be embedded into a group with isoperimetric function equivalent to n2T n2 4 Generalizations EditThere are several companion notions closely related to the notion of an isoperimetric function Thus an isodiametric function 29 bounds the smallest diameter with respect to the simplicial metric where every edge has length one of a van Kampen diagram for a particular relation w in terms of the length of w A filling length function the smallest filling length of a van Kampen diagram for a particular relation w in terms of the length of w Here the filling length of a diagram is the minimum over all combinatorial null homotopies of the diagram of the maximal length of intermediate loops bounding intermediate diagrams along such null homotopies 30 The filling length function is closely related to the non deterministic space complexity of the word problem for finitely presented groups There are several general inequalities connecting the Dehn function the optimal isodiametric function and the optimal filling length function but the precise relationship between them is not yet understood There are also higher dimensional generalizations of isoperimetric and Dehn functions 31 For k 1 the k dimensional isoperimetric function of a group bounds the minimal combinatorial volume of k 1 dimensional ball fillings of k spheres mapped into a k connected space on which the group acts properly and cocompactly the bound is given as a function of the combinatorial volume of the k sphere The standard notion of an isoperimetric function corresponds to the case k 1 Compared to the classical case only little is known about these higher dimensional filling functions One chief result is that lattices in higher rank semisimple Lie groups are undistorted in dimensions below the rank i e they satisfy the same filling functions as their associated symmetric space 32 In his monograph Asymptotic invariants of infinite groups 33 Gromov proposed a probabilistic or averaged version of Dehn function and suggested that for many groups averaged Dehn functions should have strictly slower asymptotics than the standard Dehn functions More precise treatments of the notion of an averaged Dehn function or mean Dehn function were given later by other researchers who also proved that indeed averaged Dehn functions are subasymptotic to standard Dehn functions in a number of cases such as nilpotent and abelian groups 34 35 36 A relative version of the notion of an isoperimetric function plays a central role in Osin approach to relatively hyperbolic groups 37 Grigorchuk and Ivanov explored several natural generalizations of Dehn function for group presentations on finitely many generators but with infinitely many defining relations 38 See also Editvan Kampen diagram Word hyperbolic group Automatic group Small cancellation theory Geometric group theoryNotes Edit a b c d S M Gersten Isoperimetric and isodiametric functions of finite presentations Geometric group theory Vol 1 Sussex 1991 pp 79 96 London Math Soc Lecture Note Ser 181 Cambridge University Press Cambridge 1993 Martin Greendlinger Dehn s algorithm for the word problem Communications on Pure and Applied Mathematics vol 13 1960 pp 67 83 a b c M Gromov Hyperbolic Groups in Essays in Group Theory G M Gersten ed MSRI Publ 8 1987 pp 75 263 ISBN 0 387 96618 8 MR0919829 M Sapir J C Birget E Rips Isoperimetric and isodiametric functions of groups Annals of Mathematics 2 vol 156 2002 no 2 pp 345 466 Juan M Alonso Inegalites isoperimetriques et quasi isometries Comptes Rendus de l Academie des Sciences Serie I vol 311 1990 no 12 pp 761 764 a b Martin R Bridson The geometry of the word problem Invitations to geometry and topology pp 29 91 Oxford Graduate Texts in Mathematics 7 Oxford University Press Oxford 2002 ISBN 0 19 850772 0 S M Gersten Dehn functions and l1 norms of finite presentations Algorithms and classification in combinatorial group theory Berkeley CA 1989 pp 195 224 Math Sci Res Inst Publ 23 Springer New York 1992 ISBN 0 387 97685 X a b c D B A Epstein J W Cannon D Holt S Levy M Paterson W Thurston Word Processing in Groups Jones and Bartlett Publishers Boston MA 1992 ISBN 0 86720 244 0 MR1161694 D Allcock An isoperimetric inequality for the Heisenberg groups Geometric and Functional Analysis vol 8 1998 no 2 pp 219 233 V S Guba The Dehn function of Richard Thompson s group F is quadratic Inventiones Mathematicae vol 163 2006 no 2 pp 313 342 A N Platonov An isoparametric function of the Baumslag Gersten group in Russian Vestnik Moskov Univ Ser I Mat Mekh 2004 no 3 pp 12 17 translation in Moscow University Mathematics Bulletin vol 59 2004 no 3 pp 12 17 2005 A Yu Olʹshanskii Hyperbolicity of groups with subquadratic isoperimetric inequality International Journal of Algebra and Computation vol 1 1991 no 3 pp 281 289 MR1148230doi 10 1142 S0218196791000183 B H Bowditch A short proof that a subquadratic isoperimetric inequality implies a linear one Michigan Mathematical Journal vol 42 1995 no 1 pp 103 107 MR1322192doi 10 1307 mmj 1029005156 S M Gersten D F Holt T R Riley Isoperimetric inequalities for nilpotent groups Geometric and Functional Analysis vol 13 2003 no 4 pp 795 814 MR2006557doi 10 1007 s00039 003 0430 y N Brady and M R Bridson There is only one gap in the isoperimetric spectrum Geometric and Functional Analysis vol 10 2000 no 5 pp 1053 1070 M Gromov Asymptotic invariants of infinite groups in Geometric Group Theory Vol 2 Sussex 1991 London Mathematical Society Lecture Note Series 182 Cambridge University Press Cambridge 1993 pp 1 295 P Papasoglu On the asymptotic cone of groups satisfying a quadratic isoperimetric inequality Archived 2011 05 23 at the Wayback Machine Journal of Differential Geometry vol 44 1996 no 4 pp 789 806 J Burillo and J Taback Equivalence of geometric and combinatorial Dehn functions New York Journal of Mathematics vol 8 2002 pp 169 179 M R Bridson and A Haefliger Metric spaces of non positive curvature Grundlehren der Mathematischen Wissenschaften Fundamental Principles of Mathematical Sciences vol 319 Springer Verlag Berlin 1999 ISBN 3 540 64324 9 Remark 1 7 p 444 E Leuzinger On polyhedral retracts and compactifications of locally symmetric spaces Differential Geometry and its Applications vol 20 2004 pp 293 318 Robert Young The Dehn function of SL n Z Annals of Mathematics 2 vol 177 2013 no 3 pp 969 1027 E Leuzinger and R Young Filling functions of arithmetic groups Annals of Mathematics vol 193 2021 pp 733 792 Lee Mosher Mapping class groups are automatic Annals of Mathematics 2 vol 142 1995 no 2 pp 303 384 Allen Hatcher and Karen Vogtmann Isoperimetric inequalities for automorphism groups of free groups Pacific Journal of Mathematics vol 173 1996 no 2 425 441 Martin R Bridson and Karen Vogtmann On the geometry of the automorphism group of a free group Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society vol 27 1995 no 6 pp 544 552 Michael Handel and Lee Mosher Lipschitz retraction and distortion for subgroups of Out Fn Geometry amp Topology vol 17 2013 no 3 pp 1535 1579 MR3073930doi 10 2140 gt 2013 17 1535 Martin R Bridson and Daniel Groves The quadratic isoperimetric inequality for mapping tori of free group automorphisms Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society vol 203 2010 no 955 J C Birget A Yu Ol shanskii E Rips M Sapir Isoperimetric functions of groups and computational complexity of the word problem Annals of Mathematics 2 vol 156 2002 no 2 pp 467 518 S M Gersten The double exponential theorem for isodiametric and isoperimetric functions International Journal of Algebra and Computation vol 1 1991 no 3 pp 321 327 S M Gersten and T Riley Filling length in finitely presentable groups Dedicated to John Stallings on the occasion of his 65th birthday Geometriae Dedicata vol 92 2002 pp 41 58 J M Alonso X Wang and S J Pride Higher dimensional isoperimetric or Dehn functions of groups permanent dead link Journal of Group Theory vol 2 1999 no 1 pp 81 112 E Leuzinger and R Young Filling functions of arithmetic groups Annals of Mathematics vol 193 2021 pp 733 792 M Gromov Asymptotic invariants of infinite groups in Geometric Group Theory Vol 2 Sussex 1991 London Mathematical Society Lecture Note Series 182 Cambridge University Press Cambridge 1993 pp 1 295 O Bogopolskii and E Ventura The mean Dehn functions of abelian groups permanent dead link Journal of Group Theory vol 11 2008 no 4 pp 569 586 Robert Young Averaged Dehn functions for nilpotent groups Topology vol 47 2008 no 5 pp 351 367 E G Kukina and V A Roman kov Subquadratic Growth of the Averaged Dehn Function for Free Abelian Groups Siberian Mathematical Journal vol 44 2003 no 4 1573 9260 Densi Osin Relatively Hyperbolic Groups Intrinsic Geometry Algebraic Properties and Algorithmic Problems Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society vol 179 2006 no 843 American Mathematical Society ISBN 978 0 8218 3821 1 R I Grigorchuk and S V Ivanov On Dehn Functions of Infinite Presentations of Groups Geometric and Functional Analysis vol 18 2009 no 6 pp 1841 1874Further reading EditNoel Brady Tim Riley and Hamish Short The Geometry of the Word Problem for Finitely Generated Groups Advanced Courses in Mathematics CRM Barcelona Birkhauser Basel 2007 ISBN 3 7643 7949 9 Martin R Bridson The geometry of the word problem Invitations to geometry and topology pp 29 91 Oxford Graduate Texts in Mathematics 7 Oxford University Press Oxford 2002 ISBN 0 19 850772 0 External links EditThe Isoperimetric Inequality for SL n Z A September 2008 Workshop at the American Institute of Mathematics PDF of Bridson s article The geometry of the word problem Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dehn function amp oldid 1148298375, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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