On the Gap Conjecture concerning group growth
DOI10.1007/s13373-012-0029-4zbMath1323.20035arXiv1202.6044OpenAlexW2072607394WikidataQ122932310 ScholiaQ122932310MaRDI QIDQ5172849
Publication date: 5 February 2015
Published in: Bulletin of Mathematical Sciences (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1202.6044
finitely generated groupsgrowth functionsresidually finite groupsgrowth of groupsjust-infinite groupsright orderable groupsgap conjectureresidually polycyclic groups
Generators, relations, and presentations of groups (20F05) Geometric group theory (20F65) Asymptotic properties of groups (20F69) Residual properties and generalizations; residually finite groups (20E26) Ordered groups (group-theoretic aspects) (20F60) Groups acting on trees (20E08) Limits, profinite groups (20E18)
Related Items (10)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Groups of given intermediate word growth.
- A finitary version of Gromov's polynomial growth theorem.
- Amenable semigroups
- Amenable groups that act on the line.
- Elementary amenable groups
- Groups of polynomial growth and expanding maps. Appendix by Jacques Tits
- On groups of polynomial subgroup growth
- A group of intermediate growth acting by homomorphisms on the real line
- Algebraic entropy of elementary amenable groups.
- 4-manifold topology. I: Subexponential groups
- A note on curvature and fundamental group
- Growth of finitely generated solvable groups
- Growth of finitely generated solvable groups and curvature of Riemannian manifolds
- Free subgroups in linear groups
- Milnor's Problem on the Growth of Groups and its Consequences
- The gap in the growth of residually soluble groups
- An example of a finitely presented amenable group not belonging to the classEG
- A Property of Groups of Nonexponential Growth
- Amenability and paradoxical decompositions for pseudogroups and for discrete metric spaces
- ON THE GROWTH OF RESIDUALLY SOLUBLE GROUPS
- Groups with no Free Subsemigroups
- A Note on Groups of Intermediate Growth
- Branch groups
This page was built for publication: On the Gap Conjecture concerning group growth