Free subgroups of dendrite homeomorphism group (Q428797)

From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Free subgroups of dendrite homeomorphism group
scientific article

    Statements

    Free subgroups of dendrite homeomorphism group (English)
    0 references
    25 June 2012
    0 references
    The paper under review concerns minimal group actions on dendrites. Recall that a dendrite is a nondegenerate connected and compact metric space (continuum) that is locally connected and contains no simple closed curve. An action of a group \(G\) on a space \(X\) is minimal if the orbit \(Gx\) is dense in \(X\) for every \(x\in X\). \textit{G. Margulis} [C. R. Acad. Sci., Paris, Sér. I, Math. 331, No. 9, 669--674 (2000; Zbl 0983.37029)] proved that if \(G\) acts minimally on the unit circle \(\mathbb{S}^1\), then either \(G\) contains a free noncommutative subgroup or there is a \(G\)-invariant probability measure on \(\mathbb{S}^1\). This result confirmed a weak version of the Tits alternative, see [\textit{J. Tits}, J. Algebra 20, 250--270 (1972; Zbl 0236.20032)] conjectured by \textit{É. Ghys} and \textit{V. Sergiescu} [Comment. Math. Helv. 62, 185--239 (1987; Zbl 0647.58009)]. The author shows that a stronger version of the theorem due to Margulis holds for dendrites. In particular, every group \(G\) that acts minimally on a dendrite \(X\) must contain a free noncommutative subgroup. In order to obtain his main result, the author proves a number of auxiliary lemmas that give more insight into the dynamics of \(G\) on \(X\). Namely, it is shown that \(G\) is sensitive (i.e. there is a sensitivity constant \(c>0\) such that for any nonempty open subset \(U\) of \(X\) there is \(g\in G\) such that \(\text{diam}(gU)>c\)) and proximal (i.e. for any two points \(x,y\in X\) there is a sequence \(\{g_i:i>0\}\subseteq G\) such that \(\lim_{i\to\infty}|g_ix-g_iy|=0\)). In addition, one can always find two distinct endpoints \(a\) and \(b\) in \(X\) and a sequence \(\{g_i:i>0\}\subseteq G\) such that for any subdendrite \(K\) of \(X\setminus\{a\}\) we have \(g_i(K)\to_{i\to\infty} b\) and for any subdendrite \(C\) of \(X\setminus\{b\}\) we have \(g_i^{-1}(C)\to_{i\to\infty} a\). The above results lead to the conclusion that there are two elements \(h,g\in G\) that generate a quasi-Schottky group \(<g,h>\). Since such a group is free and noncommutative the theorem follows. The author concludes with the following question: Does the theorem of Margulis hold for every one-dimensional locally connected continuum?
    0 references
    0 references
    homeomorphism group
    0 references
    dendrite
    0 references
    free group
    0 references
    ping-pong game
    0 references
    quasi-Schottky group, Tits alternative
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references