Length function

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Short description: Function in geometric group theory

In the mathematical field of geometric group theory, a length function is a function that assigns a number to each element of a group.

Definition

A length function L : G → R+ on a group G is a function satisfying:[1][2][3]

L(e)=0,L(g1)=L(g)L(g1g2)L(g1)+L(g2),g1,g2G.

Compare with the axioms for a metric and a filtered algebra.

Word metric

An important example of a length is the word metric: given a presentation of a group by generators and relations, the length of an element is the length of the shortest word expressing it.

Coxeter groups (including the symmetric group) have combinatorially important length functions, using the simple reflections as generators (thus each simple reflection has length 1). See also: length of a Weyl group element.

A longest element of a Coxeter group is both important and unique up to conjugation (up to different choice of simple reflections).

Properties

A group with a length function does not form a filtered group, meaning that the sublevel sets Si:={gL(g)i} do not form subgroups in general.

However, the group algebra of a group with a length functions forms a filtered algebra: the axiom L(gh)L(g)+L(h) corresponds to the filtration axiom.

References

  1. Lyndon, Roger C. (1963), "Length functions in groups", Mathematica Scandinavica 12: 209–234, doi:10.7146/math.scand.a-10684 
  2. Harrison, Nancy (1972), "Real length functions in groups", Transactions of the American Mathematical Society 174: 77–106, doi:10.2307/1996098 
  3. Chiswell, I. M. (1976), "Abstract length functions in groups", Mathematical Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society 80 (3): 451–463, doi:10.1017/S0305004100053093 

This article incorporates material from Length function on PlanetMath, which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.