Elementary amenable group: Difference between revisions
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In mathematics, a group is called elementary amenable if it can be built up from finite groups and abelian groups by a sequence of simple operations that result in amenable groups when applied to amenable groups. Since finite groups and abelian groups are amenable, every elementary amenable group is amenable - however, the converse is not true. Formally, the class of elementary amenable groups is the smallest subclass of the class of all groups that satisfies the following conditions:
- it contains all finite and all abelian groups
- if G is in the subclass and H is isomorphic to G, then H is in the subclass
- it is closed under the operations of taking subgroups, forming quotients, and forming extensions
- it is closed under directed unions.
The Tits alternative implies that any amenable linear group is locally virtually solvable; hence, for linear groups, amenability and elementary amenability coincide.
References
- Chou, Ching (1980). "Elementary amenable groups". Illinois Journal of Mathematics 24 (3): 396–407. doi:10.1215/ijm/1256047608. https://www.projecteuclid.org/euclid.ijm/1256047608.
![]() | Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elementary amenable group.
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