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Arithmetic Fuchsian groups are a special class of Fuchsian groups constructed using
order Order, ORDER or Orders may refer to: * Categorization, the process in which ideas and objects are recognized, differentiated, and understood * Heterarchy, a system of organization wherein the elements have the potential to be ranked a number of d ...
s in quaternion algebras. They are particular instances of arithmetic groups. The prototypical example of an arithmetic Fuchsian group is the
modular group In mathematics, the modular group is the projective special linear group of matrices with integer coefficients and determinant 1. The matrices and are identified. The modular group acts on the upper-half of the complex plane by fractional l ...
\mathrm_2(\Z ). They, and the
hyperbolic surface In mathematics, hyperbolic geometry (also called Lobachevskian geometry or Bolyai–Lobachevskian geometry) is a non-Euclidean geometry. The parallel postulate of Euclidean geometry is replaced with: :For any given line ''R'' and point ''P ...
associated to their action on the hyperbolic plane often exhibit particularly regular behaviour among Fuchsian groups and hyperbolic surfaces.


Definition and examples


Quaternion algebras

A quaternion algebra over a field F is a four-dimensional central simple F-algebra. A quaternion algebra has a basis 1, i, j, ij where i^2, j^2 \in F^\times and ij = -ji. A quaternion algebra is said to be split over F if it is isomorphic as an F-algebra to the algebra of matrices M_2(F). If \sigma is an embedding of F into a field E we shall denote by A \otimes_\sigma E the algebra obtained by extending scalars from F to E where we view F as a subfield of E via \sigma.


Arithmetic Fuchsian groups

A subgroup of \mathrm_2(\R) is said to be ''derived from a quaternion algebra'' if it can be obtained through the following construction. Let F be a totally real number field and A a quaternion algebra over F satisfying the following conditions. First there is a unique embedding \sigma: F \hookrightarrow \R such that A \otimes_\sigma \R is split over \R ; we denote by \phi : A \otimes_\sigma \R \to M_2(\R) an isomorphism of \R-algebras. We also ask that for all other embeddings \tau the algebra A \otimes_\tau \R is not split (this is equivalent to its being isomorphic to the
Hamilton quaternions In mathematics, the quaternion number system extends the complex numbers. Quaternions were first described by the Irish mathematician William Rowan Hamilton in 1843 and applied to mechanics in three-dimensional space. Hamilton defined a quatern ...
). Next we need an order \mathcal O in A. Let \mathcal O^1 be the group of elements in \mathcal O of reduced norm 1 and let \Gamma be its image in M_2(\R ) via \phi. Then the image of \Gamma is a subgroup of \mathrm_2(\R ) (since the reduced norm of a matrix algebra is just the determinant) and we can consider the Fuchsian group which is its image in \mathrm_2(\R). The main fact about these groups is that they are discrete subgroups and they have finite covolume for the
Haar measure In mathematical analysis, the Haar measure assigns an "invariant volume" to subsets of locally compact topological groups, consequently defining an integral for functions on those groups. This measure was introduced by Alfréd Haar in 1933, though ...
on \mathrm_2(\R). Moreover, the construction above yields a cocompact subgroup if and only if the algebra A is not split over F. The discreteness is a rather immediate consequence of the fact that A is only split at one real embedding. The finiteness of covolume is harder to prove. An ''arithmetic Fuchsian group'' is any subgroup of \mathrm_2(\R) which is commensurable to a group derived from a quaternion algebra. It follows immediately from this definition that arithmetic Fuchsian groups are discrete and of finite covolume (this means that they are lattices in \mathrm_2(\R)).


Examples

The simplest example of an arithmetic Fuchsian group is the modular \mathrm_2(\Z), which is obtained by the construction above with A = M_2(\Q) and \mathcal O = M_2(\Z). By taking
Eichler order In mathematics, an Eichler order, named after Martin Eichler, is an order of a quaternion algebra In mathematics, a quaternion algebra over a field ''F'' is a central simple algebra ''A'' over ''F''See Milies & Sehgal, An introduction to group ...
s in A we obtain subgroups \Gamma_0(N) for N \geqslant 2 of finite index in \mathrm_2(\Z) which can be explicitly written as follows: : \Gamma_0(N) = \left\. Of course the arithmeticity of such subgroups follows from the fact that they are finite-index in the arithmetic group \mathrm_2(\Z ) ; they belong to a more general class of finite-index subgroups, congruence subgroups. Any order in a quaternion algebra over \Q which is not split over \Q but splits over \R yields a cocompact arithmetic Fuchsian group. There is a plentiful supply of such algebras. More generally, all orders in quaternion algebras (satisfying the above conditions) which are not M_2(\Q) yield cocompact subgroups. A further example of particular interest is obtained by taking A to be the Hurwitz quaternions.


Maximal subgroups

A natural question is to identify those among arithmetic Fuchsian groups which are not strictly contained in a larger discrete subgroup. These are called ''maximal'' Kleinian groups and it is possible to give a complete classification in a given arithmetic commensurability class. Note that a theorem of Margulis implies that a lattice in \mathrm_2(\Complex) is arithmetic if and only if it is commensurable to infinitely many maximal Kleinian groups.


Congruence subgroups

A ''principal congruence subgroup'' of \Gamma = \mathrm_2(\Z) is a subgroup of the form : : \Gamma(N) = \left\ for some N \geqslant 1. These are finite-index normal subgroups and the quotient \Gamma/\Gamma(N) is isomorphic to the finite group \mathrm_2(\Z /N\Z). A ''congruence subgroup'' of \Gamma is by definition a subgroup which contains a principal congruence subgroup (these are the groups which are defined by taking the matrices in \Gamma which satisfy certain congruences modulo an integer, hence the name). Notably, not all finite-index subgroups of \mathrm_2(\Z) are congruence subgroups. A nice way to see this is to observe that \mathrm_2(\Z) has subgroups which surject onto the alternating group A_n for arbitrary n, and since for large n the group A_n is not a subgroup of \mathrm_2(\Z/N \Z) for any N these subgroups cannot be congruence subgroups. In fact one can also see that there are many more non-congruence than congruence subgroups in \mathrm_2(\Z). The notion of a congruence subgroup generalizes to cocompact arithmetic Fuchsian groups and the results above also hold in this general setting.


Construction via quadratic forms

There is an isomorphism between \mathrm_2(\R) and the connected component of the
orthogonal group In mathematics, the orthogonal group in dimension , denoted , is the Group (mathematics), group of isometry, distance-preserving transformations of a Euclidean space of dimension that preserve a fixed point, where the group operation is given by ...
\mathrm(2,1) given by the action of the former by conjugation on the space of matrices of trace zero, on which the determinant induces the structure of a real
quadratic space In mathematics, a quadratic form is a polynomial with terms all of degree two ("form" is another name for a homogeneous polynomial). For example, :4x^2 + 2xy - 3y^2 is a quadratic form in the variables and . The coefficients usually belong to ...
of signature (2,1). Arithmetic Fuchsian groups can be constructed directly in the latter group by taking the integral points in the orthogonal group associated to quadratic forms defined over number fields (and satisfying certain conditions). In this correspondence the modular group is associated up to commensurability to the group \mathrm(2,1)(\Z).


Arithmetic Kleinian groups

The construction above can be adapted to obtain subgroups in \mathrm_2(\Complex): instead of asking for F to be totally real and A to be split at exactly one real embedding one asks for F to have exactly one complex embedding up to complex conjugacy, at which A is automatically split, and that A is not split at any embedding F \hookrightarrow \R. The subgroups of \mathrm_2(\Complex) commensurable to those obtained by this construction are called ''arithmetic Kleinian groups''. As in the Fuchsian case arithmetic Kleinian groups are discrete subgroups of finite covolume.


Trace fields of arithmetic Fuchsian groups

The invariant
trace field In mathematics, the trace field of a linear group is the field generated by the traces of its elements. It is mostly studied for Kleinian and Fuchsian groups, though related objects are used in the theory of lattices in Lie groups, often under ...
of a Fuchsian group (or, through the monodromy image of the fundamental group, of a hyperbolic surface) is the field generated by the traces of the squares of its elements. In the case of an arithmetic surface whose fundamental group is commensurable with a Fuchsian group derived from a quaternion algebra over a number field F the invariant trace field equals F. One can in fact characterise arithmetic manifolds through the traces of the elements of their fundamental group, a result known as Takeuchi's criterion. A Fuchsian group is an arithmetic group if and only if the following three conditions are realised: *Its invariant trace field F is a totally real number field; *The traces of its elements are algebraic integers; *There is an embedding \sigma: F \to \R such that for any \gamma in the group, t=\mathrm(\gamma^2) and for any other embedding \sigma \neq \sigma': F \to \R we have , \sigma'(t), \leqslant 2.


Geometry of arithmetic hyperbolic surfaces

The Lie group \mathrm_2(\R) is the group of positive isometries of the hyperbolic plane \mathbb H^2. Thus, if \Gamma is a discrete subgroup of \mathrm_2(\R) then \Gamma acts properly discontinuously on \mathbb H^2. If moreover \Gamma is torsion-free then the action is
free Free may refer to: Concept * Freedom, having the ability to do something, without having to obey anyone/anything * Freethought, a position that beliefs should be formed only on the basis of logic, reason, and empiricism * Emancipate, to procur ...
and the quotient space \Gamma \setminus \mathbb H^2 is a surface (a 2-manifold) with a
hyperbolic metric In mathematics, a hyperbolic manifold is a space where every point looks locally like hyperbolic space of some dimension. They are especially studied in dimensions 2 and 3, where they are called Riemann surface#Hyperbolic Riemann surfaces, hyperbol ...
(a Riemannian metric of constant sectional curvature −1). If \Gamma is an arithmetic Fuchsian group such a surface S is called an ''arithmetic hyperbolic surface'' (not to be confused with the
arithmetic surface In mathematics, an arithmetic surface over a Dedekind domain ''R'' with fraction field K is a geometric object having one conventional dimension, and one other dimension provided by the infinitude of the primes. When ''R'' is the ring of integers ' ...
s from arithmetic geometry; however when the context is clear the "hyperbolic" specifier may be omitted). Since arithmetic Fuchsian groups are of finite covolume, arithmetic hyperbolic surfaces always have finite Riemannian volume (i.e. the integral over S of the volume form is finite).


Volume formula and finiteness

It is possible to give a formula for the volume of distinguished arithmetic surfaces from the arithmetic data with which it was constructed. Let \mathcal O be a maximal order in the quaternion algebra A of
discriminant In mathematics, the discriminant of a polynomial is a quantity that depends on the coefficients and allows deducing some properties of the roots without computing them. More precisely, it is a polynomial function of the coefficients of the origi ...
D_A over the field F, let r = : \Q/math> be its degree, D_F its
discriminant In mathematics, the discriminant of a polynomial is a quantity that depends on the coefficients and allows deducing some properties of the roots without computing them. More precisely, it is a polynomial function of the coefficients of the origi ...
and \zeta_F its Dedekind zeta function. Let \Gamma_ be the arithmetic group obtained from \mathcal O by the procedure above and S the orbifold \Gamma_ \setminus \mathbb H^2. Its volume is computed by the formula : \operatorname(S) = \frac \cdot \prod_ (N(\mathfrak p) - 1) ; the product is taken over
prime ideal In algebra, a prime ideal is a subset of a ring that shares many important properties of a prime number in the ring of integers. The prime ideals for the integers are the sets that contain all the multiples of a given prime number, together with ...
s of O_F dividing (D_A) and we recall the N(\cdot) is the norm function on ideals, i.e. N(\mathfrak p) is the cardinality of the finite ring O_F /\mathfrak p). The reader can check that if \mathcal O = M_2(\Z) the output of this formula recovers the well-known result that the hyperbolic volume of the modular surface equals \pi/3. Coupled with the description of maximal subgroups and finiteness results for number fields this formula allows to prove the following statement: :''Given any V > 0 there are only finitely many arithmetic surfaces whose volume is less than V.'' Note that in dimensions four and more Wang's finiteness theorem (a consequence of local rigidity) asserts that this statement remains true by replacing "arithmetic" by "finite volume". An asymptotic equivalent for the number if arithmetic manifolds of a certain volume was given by Belolipetsky— GelanderLubotzkyMozes.


Minimal volume

The hyperbolic orbifold of minimal volume can be obtained as the surface associated to a particular order, the Hurwitz quaternion order, and it is compact of volume \pi/21.


Closed geodesics and injectivity radii

A closed geodesic on a
Riemannian manifold In differential geometry, a Riemannian manifold or Riemannian space , so called after the German mathematician Bernhard Riemann, is a real manifold, real, smooth manifold ''M'' equipped with a positive-definite Inner product space, inner product ...
is a
closed curve In mathematics, a curve (also called a curved line in older texts) is an object similar to a line (geometry), line, but that does not have to be Linearity, straight. Intuitively, a curve may be thought of as the trace left by a moving point (ge ...
that is also
geodesic In geometry, a geodesic () is a curve representing in some sense the shortest path ( arc) between two points in a surface, or more generally in a Riemannian manifold. The term also has meaning in any differentiable manifold with a connection. ...
. One can give an effective description of the set of such curves in an arithmetic surface or three—manifold: they correspond to certain units in certain quadratic extensions of the base field (the description is lengthy and shall not be given in full here). For example, the length of primitive closed geodesics in the modular surface corresponds to the absolute value of units of norm one in real quadratic fields. This description was used by Sarnak to establish a conjecture of Gauss on the mean order of class groups of real quadratic fields. Arithmetic surfaces can be used to construct families of surfaces of genus g for any g which satisfy the (optimal, up to a constant) systolic inequality : \operatorname(S) \geqslant \frac \log g.


Spectra of arithmetic hyperbolic surfaces


Laplace eigenvalues and eigenfunctions

If S is an hyperbolic surface then there is a distinguished operator \Delta on
smooth function In mathematical analysis, the smoothness of a function (mathematics), function is a property measured by the number of Continuous function, continuous Derivative (mathematics), derivatives it has over some domain, called ''differentiability cl ...
s on S. In the case where S is compact it extends to an unbounded, essentially self-adjoint operator on the Hilbert space L^2(S) of
square-integrable function In mathematics, a square-integrable function, also called a quadratically integrable function or L^2 function or square-summable function, is a real- or complex-valued measurable function for which the integral of the square of the absolute value i ...
s on S. The spectral theorem in Riemannian geometry states that there exists an orthonormal basis \phi_0, \phi_1, \ldots, \phi_n, \ldots of eigenfunctions for \Delta. The associated eigenvalues \lambda_0 = 0 < \lambda_1 \leqslant \lambda_2 \leqslant \cdots are unbounded and their asymptotic behaviour is ruled by Weyl's law. In the case where S = \Gamma \setminus \mathbb H^2 is arithmetic these eigenfunctions are a special type of
automorphic form In harmonic analysis and number theory, an automorphic form is a well-behaved function from a topological group ''G'' to the complex numbers (or complex vector space) which is invariant under the action of a discrete subgroup \Gamma \subset G of ...
s for \Gamma called
Maass form In mathematics, Maass forms or Maass wave forms are studied in the theory of automorphic forms. Maass forms are complex-valued smooth functions of the upper half plane, which transform in a similar way under the operation of a discrete subgroup \ ...
s. The eigenvalues of \Delta are of interest for number theorists, as well as the distribution and nodal sets of the \phi_n. The case where S is of finte volume is more complicated but a similar theory can be established via the notion of cusp form.


Selberg conjecture

The ''spectral gap'' of the surface S is by definition the gap between the smallest eigenvalue \lambda_0 = 0 and the second smallest eigenvalue \lambda_1 > 0; thus its value equals \lambda_1 and we shall denote it by \lambda_1(S). In general it can be made arbitrarily small (ref Randol) (however it has a positive lower bound for a surface with fixed volume). The Selberg conjecture is the following statement providing a conjectural uniform lower bound in the arithmetic case: :''If \Gamma \subset \mathrm_2(\R) is lattice which is derived from a quaternion algebra and \Gamma' is a torsion-free congruence subgroup of \Gamma, then for S = \Gamma' \setminus \mathbb H^2 we have'' \lambda_1(S) \geqslant \tfrac. Note that the statement is only valid for a subclass of arithmetic surfaces and can be seen to be false for general subgroups of finite index in lattices derived from quaternion algebras. Selberg's original statement was made only for congruence covers of the modular surface and it has been verified for some small groups. Selberg himself has proven the lower bound \lambda_1 \geqslant \tfrac, a result known as "Selberg's 1/16 theorem". The best known result in full generality is due to Luo—Rudnick—Sarnak. The uniformity of the spectral gap has implications for the construction of expander graphs as Schreier graphs of \mathrm_2(\Z).


Relations with geometry

Selberg's trace formula shows that for an hyperbolic surface of finite volume it is equivalent to know the length spectrum (the collection of lengths of all closed geodesics on S, with multiplicities) and the spectrum of \Delta. However the precise relation is not explicit. Another relation between spectrum and geometry is given by Cheeger's inequality, which in the case of a surface S states roughly that a positive lower bound on the spectral gap of S translates into a positive lower bound for the total length of a collection of smooth closed curves separating S into two connected components.


Quantum ergodicity

The
quantum ergodicity In quantum chaos, a branch of mathematical physics, quantum ergodicity is a property of the Quantization (physics), quantization of classical mechanics, classical mechanical systems that are chaos theory, chaotic in the sense of exponential sensit ...
theorem of Shnirelman, Colin de Verdière and Zelditch states that on average, eigenfunctions equidistribute on S. The unique quantum ergodicity conjecture of Rudnick and Sarnak asks whether the stronger statement that individual eigenfunctions equidistribure is true. Formally, the statement is as follows. :''Let S be an arithmetic surface and \phi_j be a sequence of functions on S such that'' ::\Delta\phi_j = \lambda_j\phi_j, \qquad \int_S \phi_j(x)^2 \,dx = 1. :''Then for any smooth, compactly supported function \psi on S we have'' :: \lim_ \left( \int_S \psi(x) \phi_j(x)^2 \,dx \right) = \int_S \psi(x)\,dx. This conjecture has been proven by E. Lindenstrauss in the case where S is compact and the \phi_j are additionally eigenfunctions for the Hecke operators on S. In the case of congruence covers of the modular some additional difficulties occur, which were dealt with by K. Soundararajan.


Isospectral surfaces

The fact that for arithmetic surfaces the arithmetic data determines the spectrum of the Laplace operator \Delta was pointed out by M. F. Vignéras and used by her to construct examples of isospectral compact hyperbolic surfaces. The precise statement is as follows: :''If A is a quaternion algebra, \mathcal O_1, \mathcal O_2 are maximal orders in A and the associated Fuchsian groups \Gamma_1,\Gamma_2 are torsion-free then the hyperbolic surfaces S_i = \Gamma_i \setminus \mathbb H^2 have the same Laplace spectrum. '' Vignéras then constructed explicit instances for A, \mathcal O_1, \mathcal O_2 satisfying the conditions above and such that in addition \mathcal O_2 is not conjugated by an element of A to \mathcal O_1. The resulting isospectral hyperbolic surfaces are then not isometric.


Notes


References

*{{cite book, last=Katok , first=Svetlana , title=Fuchsian groups , publisher=Univ. of Chicago press , date=1992 Hyperbolic geometry Discrete groups Differential geometry Number theory