Mahler's compactness theorem

Mahler's compactness theorem In mathematics, Mahler's compactness theorem, proved by Kurt Mahler (1946), is a foundational result on lattices in Euclidean space, characterising sets of lattices that are 'bounded' in a certain definite sense. Looked at another way, it explains the ways in which a lattice could degenerate (go off to infinity) in a sequence of lattices. In intuitive terms it says that this is possible in just two ways: becoming coarse-grained with a fundamental domain that has ever larger volume; or containing shorter and shorter vectors. It is also called his selection theorem, following an older convention used in naming compactness theorems, because they were formulated in terms of sequential compactness (the possibility of selecting a convergent subsequence).
Let X be the space {Anzeigestil mathrm {GL} _{n}(mathbb {R} )/Mathrm {GL} _{n}(mathbb {Z} )} that parametrises lattices in {Anzeigestil mathbb {R} ^{n}} , with its quotient topology. There is a well-defined function Δ on X, which is the absolute value of the determinant of a matrix – this is constant on the cosets, since an invertible integer matrix has determinant 1 or −1.
Mahler's compactness theorem states that a subset Y of X is relatively compact if and only if Δ is bounded on Y, and there is a neighbourhood N of 0 in {Anzeigestil mathbb {R} ^{n}} such that for all Λ in Y, the only lattice point of Λ in N is 0 selbst.
The assertion of Mahler's theorem is equivalent to the compactness of the space of unit-covolume lattices in {Anzeigestil mathbb {R} ^{n}} whose systole is larger or equal than any fixed {displaystyle varepsilon >0} .
Mahler's compactness theorem was generalized to semisimple Lie groups by David Mumford; see Mumford's compactness theorem.
References William Andrew Coppel (2006), Zahlentheorie, p. 418. Mahler, Kurt (1946), "On lattice points in n-dimensional star bodies. ich. Existence theorems", Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Serie A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences, 187: 151–187, doi:10.1098/rspa.1946.0072, ISSN 0962-8444, JSTOR 97965, HERR 0017753 Kategorien: Geometry of numbersDiscrete groupsCompactness theoremsTheorems in number theory
Wenn Sie andere ähnliche Artikel wissen möchten Mahler's compactness theorem Sie können die Kategorie besuchen Compactness theorems.
Hinterlasse eine Antwort