A quantitative ergodic theory proof of Szemerédi's theorem (Q870018): Difference between revisions
From MaRDI portal
Changed an Item |
Set profile property. |
||
Property / MaRDI profile type | |||
Property / MaRDI profile type: MaRDI publication profile / rank | |||
Normal rank |
Revision as of 01:27, 5 March 2024
scientific article
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English | A quantitative ergodic theory proof of Szemerédi's theorem |
scientific article |
Statements
A quantitative ergodic theory proof of Szemerédi's theorem (English)
0 references
12 March 2007
0 references
The paper starts with a short discussion of some main ideas on which the known proofs of Szemerédi's theorem on arithmetic progressions of length \(k\) are based (the combinatorial ones, proofs using ergodic theory, Gowers' proof using Fourier theory and the proof based on the hypergraph regularity lemma). This can be not only useful for an interested beginner in the subject, but also explains the author's motivation for a new ergodic proof of Szemerédi's \(k\)-term arithmetic subprogressions theorem given in the paper. The proof does not depend on the axiom of choice, nor on an infinite set of measures, the use of Fourier transform or inverse theorems of additive combinatorics. The author characterizes the proof as a ``finitary'' and ``quantitative'' version of the ergodic Furstenberg proof. The reading of the paper does not require familiarity with other proofs, but the author discusses on many places their relationship to the presented one. The proof also implies explicit quantitative bounds, though very poor.
0 references
van der Waerden theorem
0 references
Szemerédi theorem
0 references
Furstenberg ergodic proof
0 references
Gowers proof
0 references
Fourier analysis
0 references
ergodig theory
0 references
inverse theory
0 references
hypergraph regularity lemma
0 references
van der Corput lemma
0 references
generalized von Neumann theorem
0 references
Gowers norms
0 references
Gowers uniform functions
0 references
uniformity norms
0 references
almost periodic functions
0 references