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Linearly ordered group

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(Redirected from Totally ordered group) Group with translationally invariant total order; i.e. if a ≤ b, then ca ≤ cb

In mathematics, specifically abstract algebra, a linearly ordered or totally ordered group is a group G equipped with a total order "≤" that is translation-invariant. This may have different meanings. We say that (G, ≤) is a:

  • left-ordered group if ≤ is left-invariant, that is a ≤ b implies ca ≤ cb for all abc in G,
  • right-ordered group if ≤ is right-invariant, that is a ≤ b implies ac ≤ bc for all abc in G,
  • bi-ordered group if ≤ is bi-invariant, that is it is both left- and right-invariant.

A group G is said to be left-orderable (or right-orderable, or bi-orderable) if there exists a left- (or right-, or bi-) invariant order on G. A simple necessary condition for a group to be left-orderable is to have no elements of finite order; however this is not a sufficient condition. It is equivalent for a group to be left- or right-orderable; however there exist left-orderable groups which are not bi-orderable.

Further definitions

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In this section {\displaystyle \leq } is a left-invariant order on a group G {\displaystyle G} with identity element e {\displaystyle e} . All that is said applies to right-invariant orders with the obvious modifications. Note that {\displaystyle \leq } being left-invariant is equivalent to the order {\displaystyle \leq '} defined by g h {\displaystyle g\leq 'h} if and only if h 1 g 1 {\displaystyle h^{-1}\leq g^{-1}} being right-invariant. In particular a group being left-orderable is the same as it being right-orderable.

In analogy with ordinary numbers we call an element g e {\displaystyle g\not =e} of an ordered group positive if e g {\displaystyle e\leq g} . The set of positive elements in an ordered group is called the positive cone, it is often denoted with G + {\displaystyle G_{+}} ; the slightly different notation G + {\displaystyle G^{+}} is used for the positive cone together with the identity element.

The positive cone G + {\displaystyle G_{+}} characterises the order {\displaystyle \leq } ; indeed, by left-invariance we see that g h {\displaystyle g\leq h} if and only if g 1 h G + {\displaystyle g^{-1}h\in G_{+}} . In fact a left-ordered group can be defined as a group G {\displaystyle G} together with a subset P {\displaystyle P} satisfying the two conditions that:

  1. for g , h P {\displaystyle g,h\in P} we have also g h P {\displaystyle gh\in P} ;
  2. let P 1 = { g 1 , g P } {\displaystyle P^{-1}=\{g^{-1},g\in P\}} , then G {\displaystyle G} is the disjoint union of P , P 1 {\displaystyle P,P^{-1}} and { e } {\displaystyle \{e\}} .

The order P {\displaystyle \leq _{P}} associated with P {\displaystyle P} is defined by g P h g 1 h P {\displaystyle g\leq _{P}h\Leftrightarrow g^{-1}h\in P} ; the first condition amounts to left-invariance and the second to the order being well-defined and total. The positive cone of P {\displaystyle \leq _{P}} is P {\displaystyle P} .

The left-invariant order {\displaystyle \leq } is bi-invariant if and only if it is conjugacy invariant, that is if g h {\displaystyle g\leq h} then for any x G {\displaystyle x\in G} we have x g x 1 x h x 1 {\displaystyle xgx^{-1}\leq xhx^{-1}} as well. This is equivalent to the positive cone being stable under inner automorphisms.


If a G {\displaystyle a\in G} , then the absolute value of a {\displaystyle a} , denoted by | a | {\displaystyle |a|} , is defined to be: | a | := { a , if  a 0 , a , otherwise . {\displaystyle |a|:={\begin{cases}a,&{\text{if }}a\geq 0,\\-a,&{\text{otherwise}}.\end{cases}}} If in addition the group G {\displaystyle G} is abelian, then for any a , b G {\displaystyle a,b\in G} a triangle inequality is satisfied: | a + b | | a | + | b | {\displaystyle |a+b|\leq |a|+|b|} .

Examples

Any left- or right-orderable group is torsion-free, that is it contains no elements of finite order besides the identity. Conversely, F. W. Levi showed that a torsion-free abelian group is bi-orderable; this is still true for nilpotent groups but there exist torsion-free, finitely presented groups which are not left-orderable.

Archimedean ordered groups

Otto Hölder showed that every Archimedean group (a bi-ordered group satisfying an Archimedean property) is isomorphic to a subgroup of the additive group of real numbers, (Fuchs & Salce 2001, p. 61). If we write the Archimedean l.o. group multiplicatively, this may be shown by considering the Dedekind completion, G ^ {\displaystyle {\widehat {G}}} of the closure of a l.o. group under n {\displaystyle n} th roots. We endow this space with the usual topology of a linear order, and then it can be shown that for each g G ^ {\displaystyle g\in {\widehat {G}}} the exponential maps g : ( R , + ) ( G ^ , ) : lim i q i Q lim i g q i {\displaystyle g^{\cdot }:(\mathbb {R} ,+)\to ({\widehat {G}},\cdot ):\lim _{i}q_{i}\in \mathbb {Q} \mapsto \lim _{i}g^{q_{i}}} are well defined order preserving/reversing, topological group isomorphisms. Completing a l.o. group can be difficult in the non-Archimedean case. In these cases, one may classify a group by its rank: which is related to the order type of the largest sequence of convex subgroups.

Other examples

Free groups are left-orderable. More generally this is also the case for right-angled Artin groups. Braid groups are also left-orderable.

The group given by the presentation a , b | a 2 b a 2 b 1 , b 2 a b 2 a 1 {\displaystyle \langle a,b|a^{2}ba^{2}b^{-1},b^{2}ab^{2}a^{-1}\rangle } is torsion-free but not left-orderable; note that it is a 3-dimensional crystallographic group (it can be realised as the group generated by two glided half-turns with orthogonal axes and the same translation length), and it is the same group that was proven to be a counterexample to the unit conjecture. More generally the topic of orderability of 3--manifold groups is interesting for its relation with various topological invariants. There exists a 3-manifold group which is left-orderable but not bi-orderable (in fact it does not satisfy the weaker property of being locally indicable).

Left-orderable groups have also attracted interest from the perspective of dynamical systems as it is known that a countable group is left-orderable if and only if it acts on the real line by homeomorphisms. Non-examples related to this paradigm are lattices in higher rank Lie groups; it is known that (for example) finite-index subgroups in S L n ( Z ) {\displaystyle \mathrm {SL} _{n}(\mathbb {Z} )} are not left-orderable; a wide generalisation of this has been recently announced.

See also

Notes

  1. Deroin, Navas & Rivas 2014, 1.1.1.
  2. Levi 1942.
  3. Deroin, Navas & Rivas 2014, 1.2.1.
  4. Duchamp, Gérard; Thibon, Jean-Yves (1992). "Simple orderings for free partially commutative groups". International Journal of Algebra and Computation. 2 (3): 351–355. doi:10.1142/S0218196792000219. Zbl 0772.20017.
  5. Dehornoy, Patrick; Dynnikov, Ivan; Rolfsen, Dale; Wiest, Bert (2002). Why are braids orderable?. Paris: Société Mathématique de France. p. xiii + 190. ISBN 2-85629-135-X.
  6. Deroin, Navas & Rivas 2014, 1.4.1.
  7. Boyer, Steven; Rolfsen, Dale; Wiest, Bert (2005). "Orderable 3-manifold groups". Annales de l'Institut Fourier. 55 (1): 243–288. arXiv:math/0211110. doi:10.5802/aif.2098. Zbl 1068.57001.
  8. Bergman, George (1991). "Right orderable groups that are not locally indicable". Pacific Journal of Mathematics. 147 (2): 243–248. doi:10.2140/pjm.1991.147.243. Zbl 0677.06007.
  9. Deroin, Navas & Rivas 2014, Proposition 1.1.8.
  10. Witte, Dave (1994). "Arithmetic groups of higher \(\mathbb{Q}\)-rank cannot act on \(1\)-manifolds". Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society. 122 (2): 333–340. doi:10.2307/2161021. JSTOR 2161021. Zbl 0818.22006.
  11. Deroin, Bertrand; Hurtado, Sebastian (2020). "Non left-orderability of lattices in higher rank semi-simple Lie groups". arXiv:2008.10687 .

References

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