Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Some Group Theory
- 3 Groups of Linear Growth
- 4 The Growth of Nilpotent Groups
- 5 The Growth of Soluble Groups
- 6 Linear Groups
- 7 Asymptotic Cones
- 8 Groups of Polynomial Growth
- 9 Infinitely Generated Groups
- 10 Intermediate Growth: Grigorchuk's First Group
- 11 More Groups of Intermediate Growth
- 12 Growth and Amenability
- 13 Intermediate Growth and Residual Finiteness
- 14 Explicit Calculations
- 15 The Generating Function
- 16 The Growth of Free Products
- 17 Conjugacy Growth
- 18 Research Problems
- References
- Index
11 - More Groups of Intermediate Growth
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 January 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Some Group Theory
- 3 Groups of Linear Growth
- 4 The Growth of Nilpotent Groups
- 5 The Growth of Soluble Groups
- 6 Linear Groups
- 7 Asymptotic Cones
- 8 Groups of Polynomial Growth
- 9 Infinitely Generated Groups
- 10 Intermediate Growth: Grigorchuk's First Group
- 11 More Groups of Intermediate Growth
- 12 Growth and Amenability
- 13 Intermediate Growth and Residual Finiteness
- 14 Explicit Calculations
- 15 The Generating Function
- 16 The Growth of Free Products
- 17 Conjugacy Growth
- 18 Research Problems
- References
- Index
Summary
Clearly, once we have constructed one group of intermediate growth, we can find many others, e.g. by taking direct products of our group either with itself or with groups of polynomial growth, or by taking finite extensions, etc. Many other constructions of groups of intermediate growth were offered as well. In this chapter we first describe a generalization, due to Grigorchuk himself, of the construction of the previous chapter. Then we will describe other approaches to the same groups; these approaches lead to many other interesting groups. Of these we supply some examples, but no proofs.
The General Grigorchuk Groups
We consider again transformations of the unit interval with the dyadic rationals removed. We divide that interval in the same way, and let E and P denote the same transformations, as before. We now let Γ be the group generated by four transformations a, b, c, d, where a = P is the same as before, and each of b, c, d acts on the subintervals (0, 1/2), (1/2, 3/4), … by some sequence of transformations P and E, e.g. P, P, P, E, E, P, E, E, E, …. Each such sequence is allowed, but we assume that the three sequences defining b, c, d are related by requiring that on each subinterval two of b, c, d act as P, and the third one as E.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- How Groups Grow , pp. 108 - 120Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011