fbpx
Wikipedia

Freiman's theorem

In additive combinatorics a discipline within mathematics, Freiman's theorem is a central result which indicates the approximate structure of sets whose sumset is small. It roughly states that if is small, then can be contained in a small generalized arithmetic progression.

Statement edit

If   is a finite subset of   with  , then   is contained in a generalized arithmetic progression of dimension at most   and size at most  , where   and   are constants depending only on  .

Examples edit

For a finite set   of integers, it is always true that

 

with equality precisely when   is an arithmetic progression.

More generally, suppose   is a subset of a finite proper generalized arithmetic progression   of dimension   such that   for some real  . Then  , so that

 

History of Freiman's theorem edit

This result is due to Gregory Freiman (1964, 1966).[1][2][3] Much interest in it, and applications, stemmed from a new proof by Imre Z. Ruzsa (1992,1994).[4][5]Mei-Chu Chang proved new polynomial estimates for the size of arithmetic progressions arising in the theorem in 2002.[6] The current best bounds were provided by Tom Sanders.[7]

Tools used in the proof edit

The proof presented here follows the proof in Yufei Zhao's lecture notes.[8]

Plünnecke–Ruzsa inequality edit

Ruzsa covering lemma edit

The Ruzsa covering lemma states the following:

Let   and   be finite subsets of an abelian group with   nonempty, and let   be a positive real number. Then if  , there is a subset   of   with at most   elements such that  .

This lemma provides a bound on how many copies of   one needs to cover  , hence the name. The proof is essentially a greedy algorithm:

Proof: Let   be a maximal subset of   such that the sets   for   are all disjoint. Then  , and also  , so  . Furthermore, for any  , there is some   such that   intersects  , as otherwise adding   to   contradicts the maximality of  . Thus  , so  .

Freiman homomorphisms and the Ruzsa modeling lemma edit

Let   be a positive integer, and   and   be abelian groups. Let   and  . A map   is a Freiman  -homomorphism if

 

whenever   for any  .

If in addition   is a bijection and   is a Freiman  -homomorphism, then   is a Freiman  -isomorphism.

If   is a Freiman  -homomorphism, then   is a Freiman  -homomorphism for any positive integer   such that  .

Then the Ruzsa modeling lemma states the following:

Let   be a finite set of integers, and let   be a positive integer. Let   be a positive integer such that  . Then there exists a subset   of   with cardinality at least   such that   is Freiman  -isomorphic to a subset of  .

The last statement means there exists some Freiman  -homomorphism between the two subsets.

Proof sketch: Choose a prime   sufficiently large such that the modulo-  reduction map   is a Freiman  -isomorphism from   to its image in  . Let   be the lifting map that takes each member of   to its unique representative in  . For nonzero  , let   be the multiplication by   map, which is a Freiman  -isomorphism. Let   be the image  . Choose a suitable subset   of   with cardinality at least   such that the restriction of   to   is a Freiman  -isomorphism onto its image, and let   be the preimage of   under  . Then the restriction of   to   is a Freiman  -isomorphism onto its image  . Lastly, there exists some choice of nonzero   such that the restriction of the modulo-  reduction   to   is a Freiman  -isomorphism onto its image. The result follows after composing this map with the earlier Freiman  -isomorphism.

Bohr sets and Bogolyubov's lemma edit

Though Freiman's theorem applies to sets of integers, the Ruzsa modeling lemma allows one to model sets of integers as subsets of finite cyclic groups. So it is useful to first work in the setting of a finite field, and then generalize results to the integers. The following lemma was proved by Bogolyubov:

Let   and let  . Then   contains a subspace of   of dimension at least  .

Generalizing this lemma to arbitrary cyclic groups requires an analogous notion to “subspace”: that of the Bohr set. Let   be a subset of   where   is a prime. The Bohr set of dimension   and width   is

 

where   is the distance from   to the nearest integer. The following lemma generalizes Bogolyubov's lemma:

Let   and  . Then   contains a Bohr set of dimension at most   and width  .

Here the dimension of a Bohr set is analogous to the codimension of a set in  . The proof of the lemma involves Fourier-analytic methods. The following proposition relates Bohr sets back to generalized arithmetic progressions, eventually leading to the proof of Freiman's theorem.

Let   be a Bohr set in   of dimension   and width  . Then   contains a proper generalized arithmetic progression of dimension at most   and size at least  .

The proof of this proposition uses Minkowski's theorem, a fundamental result in geometry of numbers.

Proof edit

By the Plünnecke–Ruzsa inequality,  . By Bertrand's postulate, there exists a prime   such that  . By the Ruzsa modeling lemma, there exists a subset   of   of cardinality at least   such that   is Freiman 8-isomorphic to a subset  .

By the generalization of Bogolyubov's lemma,   contains a proper generalized arithmetic progression of dimension   at most   and size at least  . Because   and   are Freiman 8-isomorphic,   and   are Freiman 2-isomorphic. Then the image under the 2-isomorphism of the proper generalized arithmetic progression in   is a proper generalized arithmetic progression in   called  .

But  , since  . Thus

 

so by the Ruzsa covering lemma   for some   of cardinality at most  . Then   is contained in a generalized arithmetic progression of dimension   and size at most  , completing the proof.

Generalizations edit

A result due to Ben Green and Imre Ruzsa generalized Freiman's theorem to arbitrary abelian groups. They used an analogous notion to generalized arithmetic progressions, which they called coset progressions. A coset progression of an abelian group   is a set   for a proper generalized arithmetic progression   and a subgroup   of  . The dimension of this coset progression is defined to be the dimension of  , and its size is defined to be the cardinality of the whole set. Green and Ruzsa showed the following:

Let   be a finite set in an abelian group   such that  . Then   is contained in a coset progression of dimension at most   and size at most  , where   and   are functions of   that are independent of  .

Green and Ruzsa provided upper bounds of   and   for some absolute constant  .[9]

Terence Tao (2010) also generalized Freiman's theorem to solvable groups of bounded derived length.[10]

Extending Freiman’s theorem to an arbitrary nonabelian group is still open. Results for  , when a set has very small doubling, are referred to as Kneser theorems.[11]

The polynomial Freiman–Ruzsa conjecture,[12] is generalization published in a paper[13] by Imre Ruzsa but credited by him to Katalin Marton. It states that if a subset of a group (a power of a cyclic group)   has doubling constant such that   then it is covered by a bounded number  of cosets of some subgroup   with . In 2012 Toms Sanders gave an almost polynomial bound of the conjecture for abelian groups.[14][15] In 2023 a solution over   a field of characteristic 2 has been posted as a preprint by Tim Gowers, Ben Green, Freddie Manners and Terry Tao.[16][17][18]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Freiman, G.A. (1964). "Addition of finite sets". Soviet Mathematics. Doklady. 5: 1366–1370. Zbl 0163.29501.
  2. ^ Freiman, G. A. (1966). Foundations of a Structural Theory of Set Addition (in Russian). Kazan: Kazan Gos. Ped. Inst. p. 140. Zbl 0203.35305.
  3. ^ Nathanson, Melvyn B. (1996). Additive Number Theory: Inverse Problems and Geometry of Sumsets. Graduate Texts in Mathematics. Vol. 165. Springer. ISBN 978-0-387-94655-9. Zbl 0859.11003. p. 252.
  4. ^ Ruzsa, I. Z. (August 1992). "Arithmetical progressions and the number of sums". Periodica Mathematica Hungarica. 25 (1): 105–111. doi:10.1007/BF02454387. ISSN 0031-5303.
  5. ^ Ruzsa, Imre Z. (1994). "Generalized arithmetical progressions and sumsets". Acta Mathematica Hungarica. 65 (4): 379–388. doi:10.1007/bf01876039. Zbl 0816.11008.
  6. ^ Chang, Mei-Chu (2002). "A polynomial bound in Freiman's theorem". Duke Mathematical Journal. 113 (3): 399–419. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.207.3090. doi:10.1215/s0012-7094-02-11331-3. MR 1909605.
  7. ^ Sanders, Tom (2013). "The structure theory of set addition revisited". Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society. 50: 93–127. arXiv:1212.0458. doi:10.1090/S0273-0979-2012-01392-7. S2CID 42609470.
  8. ^ Zhao, Yufei. "Graph Theory and Additive Combinatorics" (PDF).
  9. ^ Ruzsa, Imre Z.; Green, Ben (2007). "Freiman's theorem in an arbitrary abelian group". Journal of the London Mathematical Society. 75 (1): 163–175. arXiv:math/0505198. doi:10.1112/jlms/jdl021. S2CID 15115236.
  10. ^ Tao, Terence (2010). "Freiman's theorem for solvable groups". Contributions to Discrete Mathematics. 5 (2): 137–184. doi:10.11575/cdm.v5i2.62020.
  11. ^ Tao, Terence (10 November 2009). "An elementary non-commutative Freiman theorem". Terence Tao's blog.
  12. ^ "(Ben Green) The Polynomial Freiman–Ruzsa conjecture". What's new. 2007-03-11. Retrieved 2023-11-14.
  13. ^ Ruzsa, I. (1999). "An analog of Freiman's theorem in groups" (PDF). Astérisque. 258: 323–326.
  14. ^ Sanders, Tom (2012-10-15). "On the Bogolyubov–Ruzsa lemma". Analysis & PDE. 5 (3): 627–655. arXiv:1011.0107. doi:10.2140/apde.2012.5.627. ISSN 1948-206X.
  15. ^ Brubaker, Ben (2023-12-04). "An Easy-Sounding Problem Yields Numbers Too Big for Our Universe". Quanta Magazine. Retrieved 2023-12-11.
  16. ^ Gowers, W. T.; Green, Ben; Manners, Freddie; Tao, Terence (2023). "On a conjecture of Marton". arXiv:2311.05762 [math.NT].
  17. ^ "On a conjecture of Marton". What's new. 2023-11-13. Retrieved 2023-11-14.
  18. ^ Sloman, Leila (December 6, 2023). "'A-Team' of Math Proves a Critical Link Between Addition and Sets". Quanta Magazine. Retrieved December 16, 2023.

Further reading edit

  • Freiman, G. A. (1999). "Structure theory of set addition". Astérisque. 258: 1–33. Zbl 0958.11008.


This article incorporates material from Freiman's theorem on PlanetMath, which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

freiman, theorem, additive, combinatorics, discipline, within, mathematics, central, result, which, indicates, approximate, structure, sets, whose, sumset, small, roughly, states, that, displaystyle, small, then, displaystyle, contained, small, generalized, ar. In additive combinatorics a discipline within mathematics Freiman s theorem is a central result which indicates the approximate structure of sets whose sumset is small It roughly states that if A A A displaystyle A A A is small then A displaystyle A can be contained in a small generalized arithmetic progression Contents 1 Statement 2 Examples 3 History of Freiman s theorem 4 Tools used in the proof 4 1 Plunnecke Ruzsa inequality 4 2 Ruzsa covering lemma 4 3 Freiman homomorphisms and the Ruzsa modeling lemma 4 4 Bohr sets and Bogolyubov s lemma 5 Proof 6 Generalizations 7 See also 8 References 9 Further readingStatement editIf A displaystyle A nbsp is a finite subset of Z displaystyle mathbb Z nbsp with A A K A displaystyle A A leq K A nbsp then A displaystyle A nbsp is contained in a generalized arithmetic progression of dimension at most d K displaystyle d K nbsp and size at most f K A displaystyle f K A nbsp where d K displaystyle d K nbsp and f K displaystyle f K nbsp are constants depending only on K displaystyle K nbsp Examples editFor a finite set A displaystyle A nbsp of integers it is always true that A A 2 A 1 displaystyle A A geq 2 A 1 nbsp with equality precisely when A displaystyle A nbsp is an arithmetic progression More generally suppose A displaystyle A nbsp is a subset of a finite proper generalized arithmetic progression P displaystyle P nbsp of dimension d displaystyle d nbsp such that P C A displaystyle P leq C A nbsp for some real C 1 displaystyle C geq 1 nbsp Then P P 2d P displaystyle P P leq 2 d P nbsp so that A A P P 2d P C2d A displaystyle A A leq P P leq 2 d P leq C2 d A nbsp History of Freiman s theorem editThis result is due to Gregory Freiman 1964 1966 1 2 3 Much interest in it and applications stemmed from a new proof by Imre Z Ruzsa 1992 1994 4 5 Mei Chu Chang proved new polynomial estimates for the size of arithmetic progressions arising in the theorem in 2002 6 The current best bounds were provided by Tom Sanders 7 Tools used in the proof editThe proof presented here follows the proof in Yufei Zhao s lecture notes 8 Plunnecke Ruzsa inequality edit Main article Plunnecke Ruzsa inequality Ruzsa covering lemma edit The Ruzsa covering lemma states the following Let A displaystyle A nbsp and S displaystyle S nbsp be finite subsets of an abelian group with S displaystyle S nbsp nonempty and let K displaystyle K nbsp be a positive real number Then if A S K S displaystyle A S leq K S nbsp there is a subset T displaystyle T nbsp of A displaystyle A nbsp with at most K displaystyle K nbsp elements such that A T S S displaystyle A subseteq T S S nbsp This lemma provides a bound on how many copies of S S displaystyle S S nbsp one needs to cover A displaystyle A nbsp hence the name The proof is essentially a greedy algorithm Proof Let T displaystyle T nbsp be a maximal subset of A displaystyle A nbsp such that the sets t S displaystyle t S nbsp for A displaystyle A nbsp are all disjoint Then T S T S displaystyle T S T cdot S nbsp and also T S A S K S displaystyle T S leq A S leq K S nbsp so T K displaystyle T leq K nbsp Furthermore for any a A displaystyle a in A nbsp there is some t T displaystyle t in T nbsp such that t S displaystyle t S nbsp intersects a S displaystyle a S nbsp as otherwise adding a displaystyle a nbsp to T displaystyle T nbsp contradicts the maximality of T displaystyle T nbsp Thus a T S S displaystyle a in T S S nbsp so A T S S displaystyle A subseteq T S S nbsp Freiman homomorphisms and the Ruzsa modeling lemma edit Let s 2 displaystyle s geq 2 nbsp be a positive integer and G displaystyle Gamma nbsp and G displaystyle Gamma nbsp be abelian groups Let A G displaystyle A subseteq Gamma nbsp and B G displaystyle B subseteq Gamma nbsp A map f A B displaystyle varphi colon A to B nbsp is a Freiman s displaystyle s nbsp homomorphism if f a1 f as f a1 f as displaystyle varphi a 1 cdots varphi a s varphi a 1 cdots varphi a s nbsp whenever a1 as a1 as displaystyle a 1 cdots a s a 1 cdots a s nbsp for any a1 as a1 as A displaystyle a 1 ldots a s a 1 ldots a s in A nbsp If in addition f displaystyle varphi nbsp is a bijection and f 1 B A displaystyle varphi 1 colon B to A nbsp is a Freiman s displaystyle s nbsp homomorphism then f displaystyle varphi nbsp is a Freiman s displaystyle s nbsp isomorphism If f displaystyle varphi nbsp is a Freiman s displaystyle s nbsp homomorphism then f displaystyle varphi nbsp is a Freiman t displaystyle t nbsp homomorphism for any positive integer t displaystyle t nbsp such that 2 t s displaystyle 2 leq t leq s nbsp Then the Ruzsa modeling lemma states the following Let A displaystyle A nbsp be a finite set of integers and let s 2 displaystyle s geq 2 nbsp be a positive integer Let N displaystyle N nbsp be a positive integer such that N sA sA displaystyle N geq sA sA nbsp Then there exists a subset A displaystyle A nbsp of A displaystyle A nbsp with cardinality at least A s displaystyle A s nbsp such that A displaystyle A nbsp is Freiman s displaystyle s nbsp isomorphic to a subset of Z NZ displaystyle mathbb Z N mathbb Z nbsp The last statement means there exists some Freiman s displaystyle s nbsp homomorphism between the two subsets Proof sketch Choose a prime q displaystyle q nbsp sufficiently large such that the modulo q displaystyle q nbsp reduction map pq Z Z qZ displaystyle pi q colon mathbb Z to mathbb Z q mathbb Z nbsp is a Freiman s displaystyle s nbsp isomorphism from A displaystyle A nbsp to its image in Z qZ displaystyle mathbb Z q mathbb Z nbsp Let psq Z qZ Z displaystyle psi q colon mathbb Z q mathbb Z to mathbb Z nbsp be the lifting map that takes each member of Z qZ displaystyle mathbb Z q mathbb Z nbsp to its unique representative in 1 q Z displaystyle 1 ldots q subseteq mathbb Z nbsp For nonzero l Z qZ displaystyle lambda in mathbb Z q mathbb Z nbsp let l Z qZ Z qZ displaystyle cdot lambda colon mathbb Z q mathbb Z to mathbb Z q mathbb Z nbsp be the multiplication by l displaystyle lambda nbsp map which is a Freiman s displaystyle s nbsp isomorphism Let B displaystyle B nbsp be the image l pq A displaystyle cdot lambda circ pi q A nbsp Choose a suitable subset B displaystyle B nbsp of B displaystyle B nbsp with cardinality at least B s displaystyle B s nbsp such that the restriction of psq displaystyle psi q nbsp to B displaystyle B nbsp is a Freiman s displaystyle s nbsp isomorphism onto its image and let A A displaystyle A subseteq A nbsp be the preimage of B displaystyle B nbsp under l pq displaystyle cdot lambda circ pi q nbsp Then the restriction of psq l pq displaystyle psi q circ cdot lambda circ pi q nbsp to A displaystyle A nbsp is a Freiman s displaystyle s nbsp isomorphism onto its image psq B displaystyle psi q B nbsp Lastly there exists some choice of nonzero l displaystyle lambda nbsp such that the restriction of the modulo N displaystyle N nbsp reduction Z Z NZ displaystyle mathbb Z to mathbb Z N mathbb Z nbsp to psq B displaystyle psi q B nbsp is a Freiman s displaystyle s nbsp isomorphism onto its image The result follows after composing this map with the earlier Freiman s displaystyle s nbsp isomorphism Bohr sets and Bogolyubov s lemma edit Though Freiman s theorem applies to sets of integers the Ruzsa modeling lemma allows one to model sets of integers as subsets of finite cyclic groups So it is useful to first work in the setting of a finite field and then generalize results to the integers The following lemma was proved by Bogolyubov Let A F2n displaystyle A in mathbb F 2 n nbsp and let a A 2n displaystyle alpha A 2 n nbsp Then 4A displaystyle 4A nbsp contains a subspace of F2n displaystyle mathbb F 2 n nbsp of dimension at least n a 2 displaystyle n alpha 2 nbsp Generalizing this lemma to arbitrary cyclic groups requires an analogous notion to subspace that of the Bohr set Let R displaystyle R nbsp be a subset of Z NZ displaystyle mathbb Z N mathbb Z nbsp where N displaystyle N nbsp is a prime The Bohr set of dimension R displaystyle R nbsp and width e displaystyle varepsilon nbsp is Bohr R e x Z NZ r R rx N e displaystyle operatorname Bohr R varepsilon x in mathbb Z N mathbb Z forall r in R rx N leq varepsilon nbsp where rx N displaystyle rx N nbsp is the distance from rx N displaystyle rx N nbsp to the nearest integer The following lemma generalizes Bogolyubov s lemma Let A Z NZ displaystyle A in mathbb Z N mathbb Z nbsp and a A N displaystyle alpha A N nbsp Then 2A 2A displaystyle 2A 2A nbsp contains a Bohr set of dimension at most a 2 displaystyle alpha 2 nbsp and width 1 4 displaystyle 1 4 nbsp Here the dimension of a Bohr set is analogous to the codimension of a set in F2n displaystyle mathbb F 2 n nbsp The proof of the lemma involves Fourier analytic methods The following proposition relates Bohr sets back to generalized arithmetic progressions eventually leading to the proof of Freiman s theorem Let X displaystyle X nbsp be a Bohr set in Z NZ displaystyle mathbb Z N mathbb Z nbsp of dimension d displaystyle d nbsp and width e displaystyle varepsilon nbsp Then X displaystyle X nbsp contains a proper generalized arithmetic progression of dimension at most d displaystyle d nbsp and size at least e d dN displaystyle varepsilon d d N nbsp The proof of this proposition uses Minkowski s theorem a fundamental result in geometry of numbers Proof editBy the Plunnecke Ruzsa inequality 8A 8A K16 A displaystyle 8A 8A leq K 16 A nbsp By Bertrand s postulate there exists a prime N displaystyle N nbsp such that 8A 8A N 2K16 A displaystyle 8A 8A leq N leq 2K 16 A nbsp By the Ruzsa modeling lemma there exists a subset A displaystyle A nbsp of A displaystyle A nbsp of cardinality at least A 8 displaystyle A 8 nbsp such that A displaystyle A nbsp is Freiman 8 isomorphic to a subset B Z NZ displaystyle B subseteq mathbb Z N mathbb Z nbsp By the generalization of Bogolyubov s lemma 2B 2B displaystyle 2B 2B nbsp contains a proper generalized arithmetic progression of dimension d displaystyle d nbsp at most 1 8 2K16 2 256K32 displaystyle 1 8 cdot 2K 16 2 256K 32 nbsp and size at least 1 4d dN displaystyle 1 4d d N nbsp Because A displaystyle A nbsp and B displaystyle B nbsp are Freiman 8 isomorphic 2A 2A displaystyle 2A 2A nbsp and 2B 2B displaystyle 2B 2B nbsp are Freiman 2 isomorphic Then the image under the 2 isomorphism of the proper generalized arithmetic progression in 2B 2B displaystyle 2B 2B nbsp is a proper generalized arithmetic progression in 2A 2A 2A 2A displaystyle 2A 2A subseteq 2A 2A nbsp called P displaystyle P nbsp But P A 3A 2A displaystyle P A subseteq 3A 2A nbsp since P 2A 2A displaystyle P subseteq 2A 2A nbsp Thus P A 3A 2A 8A 8A N 4d d P displaystyle P A leq 3A 2A leq 8A 8A leq N leq 4d d P nbsp so by the Ruzsa covering lemma A X P P displaystyle A subseteq X P P nbsp for some X A displaystyle X subseteq A nbsp of cardinality at most 4d d displaystyle 4d d nbsp Then X P P displaystyle X P P nbsp is contained in a generalized arithmetic progression of dimension X d displaystyle X d nbsp and size at most 2 X 2d P 2 X d 2A 2A 2 X dK4 A displaystyle 2 X 2 d P leq 2 X d 2A 2A leq 2 X d K 4 A nbsp completing the proof Generalizations editA result due to Ben Green and Imre Ruzsa generalized Freiman s theorem to arbitrary abelian groups They used an analogous notion to generalized arithmetic progressions which they called coset progressions A coset progression of an abelian group G displaystyle G nbsp is a set P H displaystyle P H nbsp for a proper generalized arithmetic progression P displaystyle P nbsp and a subgroup H displaystyle H nbsp of G displaystyle G nbsp The dimension of this coset progression is defined to be the dimension of P displaystyle P nbsp and its size is defined to be the cardinality of the whole set Green and Ruzsa showed the following Let A displaystyle A nbsp be a finite set in an abelian group G displaystyle G nbsp such that A A K A displaystyle A A leq K A nbsp Then A displaystyle A nbsp is contained in a coset progression of dimension at most d K displaystyle d K nbsp and size at most f K A displaystyle f K A nbsp where f K displaystyle f K nbsp and d K displaystyle d K nbsp are functions of K displaystyle K nbsp that are independent of G displaystyle G nbsp Green and Ruzsa provided upper bounds of d K CK4log K 2 displaystyle d K CK 4 log K 2 nbsp and f K eCK4log2 K 2 displaystyle f K e CK 4 log 2 K 2 nbsp for some absolute constant C displaystyle C nbsp 9 Terence Tao 2010 also generalized Freiman s theorem to solvable groups of bounded derived length 10 Extending Freiman s theorem to an arbitrary nonabelian group is still open Results for K lt 2 displaystyle K lt 2 nbsp when a set has very small doubling are referred to as Kneser theorems 11 The polynomial Freiman Ruzsa conjecture 12 is generalization published in a paper 13 by Imre Ruzsa but credited by him to Katalin Marton It states that if a subset of a group a power of a cyclic group A G displaystyle A subset G nbsp has doubling constant such that A A K A displaystyle A A leq K A nbsp then it is covered by a bounded number KC displaystyle K C nbsp of cosets of some subgroup H G displaystyle H subset G nbsp with H A displaystyle H leq A nbsp In 2012 Toms Sanders gave an almost polynomial bound of the conjecture for abelian groups 14 15 In 2023 a solution over G F2n displaystyle G mathbb F 2 n nbsp a field of characteristic 2 has been posted as a preprint by Tim Gowers Ben Green Freddie Manners and Terry Tao 16 17 18 See also editMarkov spectrum Plunnecke Ruzsa inequality Kneser s theorem combinatorics References edit Freiman G A 1964 Addition of finite sets Soviet Mathematics Doklady 5 1366 1370 Zbl 0163 29501 Freiman G A 1966 Foundations of a Structural Theory of Set Addition in Russian Kazan Kazan Gos Ped Inst p 140 Zbl 0203 35305 Nathanson Melvyn B 1996 Additive Number Theory Inverse Problems and Geometry of Sumsets Graduate Texts in Mathematics Vol 165 Springer ISBN 978 0 387 94655 9 Zbl 0859 11003 p 252 Ruzsa I Z August 1992 Arithmetical progressions and the number of sums Periodica Mathematica Hungarica 25 1 105 111 doi 10 1007 BF02454387 ISSN 0031 5303 Ruzsa Imre Z 1994 Generalized arithmetical progressions and sumsets Acta Mathematica Hungarica 65 4 379 388 doi 10 1007 bf01876039 Zbl 0816 11008 Chang Mei Chu 2002 A polynomial bound in Freiman s theorem Duke Mathematical Journal 113 3 399 419 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 207 3090 doi 10 1215 s0012 7094 02 11331 3 MR 1909605 Sanders Tom 2013 The structure theory of set addition revisited Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society 50 93 127 arXiv 1212 0458 doi 10 1090 S0273 0979 2012 01392 7 S2CID 42609470 Zhao Yufei Graph Theory and Additive Combinatorics PDF Ruzsa Imre Z Green Ben 2007 Freiman s theorem in an arbitrary abelian group Journal of the London Mathematical Society 75 1 163 175 arXiv math 0505198 doi 10 1112 jlms jdl021 S2CID 15115236 Tao Terence 2010 Freiman s theorem for solvable groups Contributions to Discrete Mathematics 5 2 137 184 doi 10 11575 cdm v5i2 62020 Tao Terence 10 November 2009 An elementary non commutative Freiman theorem Terence Tao s blog Ben Green The Polynomial Freiman Ruzsa conjecture What s new 2007 03 11 Retrieved 2023 11 14 Ruzsa I 1999 An analog of Freiman s theorem in groups PDF Asterisque 258 323 326 Sanders Tom 2012 10 15 On the Bogolyubov Ruzsa lemma Analysis amp PDE 5 3 627 655 arXiv 1011 0107 doi 10 2140 apde 2012 5 627 ISSN 1948 206X Brubaker Ben 2023 12 04 An Easy Sounding Problem Yields Numbers Too Big for Our Universe Quanta Magazine Retrieved 2023 12 11 Gowers W T Green Ben Manners Freddie Tao Terence 2023 On a conjecture of Marton arXiv 2311 05762 math NT On a conjecture of Marton What s new 2023 11 13 Retrieved 2023 11 14 Sloman Leila December 6 2023 A Team of Math Proves a Critical Link Between Addition and Sets Quanta Magazine Retrieved December 16 2023 Further reading editFreiman G A 1999 Structure theory of set addition Asterisque 258 1 33 Zbl 0958 11008 This article incorporates material from Freiman s theorem on PlanetMath which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike License Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Freiman 27s theorem amp oldid 1193588169, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.