In
mathematics
Mathematics is a field of study that discovers and organizes methods, Mathematical theory, theories and theorems that are developed and Mathematical proof, proved for the needs of empirical sciences and mathematics itself. There are many ar ...
, random groups are certain
group
A group is a number of persons or things that are located, gathered, or classed together.
Groups of people
* Cultural group, a group whose members share the same cultural identity
* Ethnic group, a group whose members share the same ethnic iden ...
s obtained by a
probabilistic
Probability is a branch of mathematics and statistics concerning events and numerical descriptions of how likely they are to occur. The probability of an event is a number between 0 and 1; the larger the probability, the more likely an e ...
construction. They were introduced by
Misha Gromov to answer questions such as "What does a typical group look like?"
It so happens that, once a precise definition is given, random groups satisfy some properties with very high probability, whereas other properties fail with very high probability. For instance, very probably random groups are
hyperbolic groups. In this sense, one can say that "most groups are hyperbolic".
Definition
The definition of random groups depends on a probabilistic model on the set of possible groups. Various such probabilistic models yield different (but related) notions of random groups.
Any group can be defined by a
group presentation
In mathematics, a presentation is one method of specifying a group. A presentation of a group ''G'' comprises a set ''S'' of generators—so that every element of the group can be written as a product of powers of some of these generators—and ...
involving generators and relations. For instance, the Abelian group
has a presentation with two generators
and
, and the relation
, or equivalently
. The main idea of random groups is to start with a fixed number of group generators
, and imposing relations of the form
where each
is a random word involving the letters
and their formal inverses
. To specify a model of random groups is to specify a precise way in which
,
and the random relations
are chosen.
Once the random relations
have been chosen, the resulting random group
is defined in the standard way for group presentations, namely:
is the quotient of the
free group
In mathematics, the free group ''F'S'' over a given set ''S'' consists of all words that can be built from members of ''S'', considering two words to be different unless their equality follows from the group axioms (e.g. ''st'' = ''suu''− ...
with generators
, by the normal subgroup
generated by the relations
seen as elements of
:
:
The few-relator model of random groups
The simplest model of random groups is the ''few-relator model''. In this model, a number of generators
and a number of relations
are fixed. Fix an additional parameter
(the length of the relations), which is typically taken very large.
Then, the model consists in choosing the relations
at random, uniformly and independently among all possible
reduced word In group theory, a word is any written product of group elements and their inverses. For example, if ''x'', ''y'' and ''z'' are elements of a group ''G'', then ''xy'', ''z''−1''xzz'' and ''y''−1''zxx''−1''yz''−1 are words in the set . Two ...
s of length at most
involving the letters
and their formal inverses
.
This model is especially interesting when the relation length
tends to infinity: with probability tending to
as
a random group in this model is
hyperbolic
Hyperbolic may refer to:
* of or pertaining to a hyperbola, a type of smooth curve lying in a plane in mathematics
** Hyperbolic geometry, a non-Euclidean geometry
** Hyperbolic functions, analogues of ordinary trigonometric functions, defined u ...
and satisfies other nice properties.
Further remarks
More refined models of random groups have been defined.
For instance, in the ''density model'', the number of relations is allowed to grow with the length of the relations. Then there is a sharp "phase transition" phenomenon: if the number of relations is larger than some threshold, the random group "collapses" (because the relations allow to show that any word is equal to any other), whereas below the threshold the resulting random group is infinite and hyperbolic.
Constructions of random groups can also be twisted in specific ways to build groups with particular properties. For instance, Gromov used this technique to build new groups that are counter-examples to an extension of the
Baum–Connes conjecture.
References
*
Mikhail Gromov. ''Hyperbolic groups.'' Essays in group theory, 75–263, Math. Sci. Res. Inst. Publ., 8, Springer, New York, 1987.
*
Mikhail Gromov. "Random walk in random groups." ''Geom. Funct. Anal.'', vol. 13 (2003), 73–146.
Geometric group theory
Properties of groups
Combinatorics on words