Kazhdan's Property (T)
Property (T) is a rigidity property for topological groups, first formulated by D. Kazhdan in the mid 1960's with the aim of demonstrating that a large class of lattices are finitely generated. Later developments have shown that Property (T) plays an important role in an amazingly large variety of subjects, including discrete subgroups of Lie groups, ergodic theory, random walks, operator algebras, combinatorics, and theoretical computer science. This monograph offers a comprehensive introduction to the theory. It describes the two most important points of view on Property (T): the first uses a unitary group representation approach, and the second a fixed point property for affine isometric actions. Via these the authors discuss a range of important examples and applications to several domains of mathematics. A detailed appendix provides a systematic exposition of parts of the theory of group representations that are used to formulate and develop Property (T).
- Introduces a very active area of research with applications to topological group theory, measure theory, ergodic theory, random walks, combinatorics, and more
- The Appendix acts as an introduction to numerous important subjects of mathematics, plus as a first course on representation theory on Hilbert spaces
- Includes lots of examples and avoids unnecessary technicalities, ensuring it is accessible to students as well as academic researchers
Product details
April 2008Hardback
9780521887205
486 pages
233 × 161 × 29 mm
0.8kg
6 b/w illus. 4 tables 125 exercises
Available
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Part I. Kazhdan's Property (T):
- 1. Property (T)
- 2. Property (FH)
- 3. Reduced Cohomology
- 4. Bounded generation
- 5. A spectral criterion for Property (T)
- 6. Some applications of Property (T)
- 7. A short list of open questions
- Part II. Background on Unitary Representations: A. Unitary group representations
- B. Measures on homogeneous spaces
- C. Functions of positive type
- D. Representations of abelian groups
- E. Induced representations
- F. Weak containment and Fell topology
- G. Amenability
- Appendix
- Bibliography
- List of symbols
- Index.