In mathematics, the Tits alternative, named after Jacques Tits, is an important theorem about the structure of finitely generated linear groups.
The theorem, proven by Tits, is stated as follows.
Let be a finitely generated linear group over a field. Then two following possibilities occur:
either is virtually solvable (i.e., has a solvable subgroup of finite index)
or it contains a nonabelian free group (i.e., it has a subgroup isomorphic to the free group on two generators).
A linear group is not amenable if and only if it contains a non-abelian free group (thus the von Neumann conjecture, while not true in general, holds for linear groups).
The Tits alternative is an important ingredient in the proof of Gromov's theorem on groups of polynomial growth. In fact the alternative essentially establishes the result for linear groups (it reduces it to the case of solvable groups, which can be dealt with by elementary means).
In geometric group theory, a group G is said to satisfy the Tits alternative if for every subgroup H of G either H is virtually solvable or H contains a nonabelian free subgroup (in some versions of the definition this condition is only required to be satisfied for all finitely generated subgroups of G).
Examples of groups satisfying the Tits alternative which are either not linear, or at least not known to be linear, are:
Hyperbolic groups
Mapping class groups;
Out(Fn);
Certain groups of birational transformations of algebraic surfaces.
Examples of groups not satisfying the Tits alternative are:
the Grigorchuk group;
Thompson's group F.
The proof of the original Tits alternative is by looking at the Zariski closure of in . If it is solvable then the group is solvable. Otherwise one looks at the image of in the Levi component. If it is noncompact then a ping-pong argument finishes the proof. If it is compact then either all eigenvalues of elements in the image of are roots of unity and then the image is finite, or one can find an embedding of in which one can apply the ping-pong strategy.
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En mathématiques et notamment en théorie des groupes, le groupe de Grigorchuk, aussi appelé le premier groupe de Grigorchuk, est un groupe finiment engendré construit par Rostislav Grigorchuk et qui fournit le premier exemple d'un groupe finiment engendré de croissance intermédiaire, c'est-à-dire plus rapide qu'un polynôme et plus lent qu'une exponentielle. Le groupe de Grigorchuk est aussi le premier exemple d'un groupe moyennable qui n’est pas élémentairement moyennable, ce qui répond à une question de Mahlon Day posée en 1957.
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En mathématiques, un groupe moyennable (parfois appelé groupe amenable par calque de l'anglais) est un groupe topologique localement compact qu'on peut munir d'une opération de « moyenne » sur les fonctions bornées, invariante par les translations par les éléments du groupe. La définition initiale, donnée à partir d'une mesure (simplement additive) des sous-ensembles du groupe, fut proposée par John von Neumann en 1929 à la suite de son analyse du paradoxe de Banach-Tarski.
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