An analytic approach to cardinalities of sumsets (Q2151183): Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 02:39, 10 February 2024
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English | An analytic approach to cardinalities of sumsets |
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An analytic approach to cardinalities of sumsets (English)
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30 June 2022
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The paper under review studies what properties of a subset of \(\mathbb{Z}^d\) make its sumset large. For a finite set \(U\subset \mathbb{Z}^d\), the \textit{additive tripling} of \(U\) is \(\beta(U)= \inf_{A,B} \vert A+B+U\vert /\sqrt{\vert A\vert \vert B\vert}\). The paper defines recursively \textit{quasicubes}, a generalization of the hypercubes. In \(\mathbb{Z}^d\), quasicubes have \(2^d\) elements. Among many related results, the paper shows that subsets of quasicubes have maximal \(\beta\). As a corollary, for a \(d\)-dimensional quasicube \(U\), and any \(V\subset U\) and \(k\geq 2\), the paper obtains \(\vert (2^k-1)V\vert \geq \vert V\vert ^k\). The proof techniques include a discrete Prékopa-Leindler inequality for quasicubes, a discrete Brunn-Minkowski inequality for quasicubes, tensorisation, etc. Typically, the results of the paper can be formulated in a more general setting, namely in torsion-free commutative groups, not just in \(\mathbb{Z}^d\).
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sumset
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additive doubling
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additive tripling
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quasicube
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tensorization
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torsion-free commutative group
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Prékopa-Leindler inequality
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Beckner's inequality
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