scholarly journals Amenability, connected components, and definable actions

2021 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ehud Hrushovski ◽  
Krzysztof Krupiński ◽  
Anand Pillay

AbstractWe study amenability of definable groups and topological groups, and prove various results, briefly described below. Among our main technical tools, of interest in its own right, is an elaboration on and strengthening of the Massicot-Wagner version (Massicot and Wagner in J Ec Polytech Math 2:55–63, 2015) of the stabilizer theorem (Hrushovski in J Am Math Soc 25:189–243, 2012), and also some results about measures and measure-like functions (which we call means and pre-means). As an application we show that if G is an amenable topological group, then the Bohr compactification of G coincides with a certain “weak Bohr compactification” introduced in Krupiński and Pillay (Adv Math 345:1253–1299, 2019). In other words, the conclusion says that certain connected components of G coincide: $$G^{00}_{{{\,\mathrm{{top}}\,}}} = G^{000}_{{{\,\mathrm{{top}}\,}}}$$ G top 00 = G top 000 . We also prove wide generalizations of this result, implying in particular its extension to a “definable-topological” context, confirming the main conjectures from Krupiński and Pillay (2019). We also introduce $$\bigvee $$ ⋁ -definable group topologies on a given $$\emptyset $$ ∅ -definable group G (including group topologies induced by type-definable subgroups as well as uniformly definable group topologies), and prove that the existence of a mean on the lattice of closed, type-definable subsets of G implies (under some assumption) that $${{\,\mathrm{{cl}}\,}}(G^{00}_M) = {{\,\mathrm{{cl}}\,}}(G^{000}_M)$$ cl ( G M 00 ) = cl ( G M 000 ) for any model M. Secondly, we study the relationship between (separate) definability of an action of a definable group on a compact space [in the sense of Gismatullin et al. (Ann Pure Appl Log 165:552–562, 2014)], weakly almost periodic (wap) actions of G [in the sense of Ellis and Nerurkar (Trans Am Math Soc 313:103–119, 1989)], and stability. We conclude that any group G definable in a sufficiently saturated structure is “weakly definably amenable” in the sense of Krupiński and Pillay (2019), namely any definable action of G on a compact space supports a G-invariant probability measure. This gives negative solutions to some questions and conjectures raised in Krupiński (J Symb Log 82:1080–1105, 2017) and Krupiński and Pillay (2019). Stability in continuous logic will play a role in some proofs in this part of the paper. Thirdly, we give an example of a $$\emptyset $$ ∅ -definable approximate subgroup X in a saturated extension of the group $${{\mathbb {F}}}_2 \times {{\mathbb {Z}}}$$ F 2 × Z in a suitable language (where $${{\mathbb {F}}}_2$$ F 2 is the free group in 2-generators) for which the $$\bigvee $$ ⋁ -definable group $$H:=\langle X \rangle $$ H : = ⟨ X ⟩ contains no type-definable subgroup of bounded index. This refutes a conjecture by Wagner and shows that the Massicot-Wagner approach to prove that a locally compact (and in consequence also Lie) “model” exists for each approximate subgroup does not work in general (they proved in (Massicot and Wagner 2015) that it works for definably amenable approximate subgroups).

2021 ◽  
Vol 32 (4) ◽  
pp. 91
Author(s):  
Alexander Rubtsov

In the article, the relationship between the highest professional specialization of philosophy and its involvement in the realities of everyday life consciousness, collective and individual, are considered. Karl Jaspers defines philosophy precisely through the natural need and ability of human being as such, from the piercing questions of children to the revelations of anomalous geniuses. Great philosophers only concentrate this sleeping ability in a person to see the world directly and every time anew. Rightly considered the most closed type of intellectual activity, philosophy at the same time provides examples of live communication and direct appeal to people and society.  The fact that each of us is the bearer of philosophical ideas (whether we are aware of it or not) leads to the problem of ideology. By analogy with the constitution of the political by Carl Schmitt through the opposition "friend — enemy", ideology is constituted by the opposition of "faith — knowledge" in a single continuum between the poles of "almost religion" and "almost philosophy". If ideology asserts the non-obvious as obvious, then the mission of philosophy is a systematic criticism of the obvious.  This conflict manifests itself both in society and in the consciousness of an individual.  The classic understanding of ideology as a purely external manipulation (“consciousness for the Other”) is challenged by the presence in the consciousness of the individual subject of “internal dialogue” and “internal speech” with the effects of ideological work and ideological struggle with oneself (the individual as a micromodel of society and the state).  Postmodern all the more accentuates the non-professional dimension of philosophy by rejecting the schemes of progress and hierarchy, the logic of binary oppositions, including high and low, center and marginal, specialized and amateur.  The ability to reflect is the most important feature of a sovereign personality in its resistance to the "penetrating" ideology and new mythology, degrading to intellectual barbarism and political savagery.


2012 ◽  
Vol 08 (03) ◽  
pp. 361-383
Author(s):  
J. AL-MUFARRIJ ◽  
T. M. G. AHSANULLAH

The purpose of this article is to investigate the relationships between some of the lattice-valued topological groups, and the lattice-valued uniformities that they inherit. In so doing, we look at the relationship between (a) crisp sets of lattice-valued neighborhood groups and lattice-valued neighborhood topological groups, and their uniformities; (b) lattice-valued topological groups of ordinary subsets and fuzzy neighborhood groups, and their uniformities. We also investigate the connection between stratified lattice-valued neighborhood topological group and its level spaces.


2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (4.10) ◽  
pp. 970
Author(s):  
D. Vidhya ◽  
T. Yogalakshmi ◽  
V. Visalakshi

This paper investigates the concepts of fuzzy rough G-border and fuzzy rough G-exterior. Some interesting properties are established. Also the relationship between them are established. 


1993 ◽  
Vol 48 (2) ◽  
pp. 209-249 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vladimir G. Pestov

We survey the present trends in theory of universal arrows to forgetful functors from various categories of topological algebra and functional analysis to categories of topology and topological algebra. Among them are free topological groups, free locally convex spaces, free Banach-Lie algebras, and more. An accent is put on the relationship of those constructions with other areas of mathematics and their possible applications. A number of open problems is discussed; some of them belong to universal arrow theory, and other may become amenable to the methods of this theory.


2019 ◽  
Vol 65 (1) ◽  
pp. 21-32
Author(s):  
T F Zhuraev ◽  
Z O Tursunova ◽  
K R Zhuvonov

In this paper, we consider covariant functors F : Comp → Comp acting in category of shape-preserving compact sets [2], infinite compact sets, and shape equivalence [9]. Also we study action of compact functors and shape properties of the compact space X consisting of connected components ОX of the compact X as well as shape identity ShX = ShY of infinite compacts X and Y for the space P (X) of probability measures and its subspaces.


2014 ◽  
Vol 33 (1) ◽  
pp. 181
Author(s):  
Nirmala Rebecca Paul

The paper introduces soft omega-closed sets in soft topological spaces and establishes the relationship between other existing generlised closed sets in soft topological spaces. It derives the basic properties of soft omega-closed sets. As an application it proves that a soft omega-closed set in a soft compact space is soft compact.


2017 ◽  
Vol 82 (3) ◽  
pp. 1080-1105 ◽  
Author(s):  
KRZYSZTOF KRUPIŃSKI

AbstractFor a group G definable in a first order structure M we develop basic topological dynamics in the category of definable G-flows. In particular, we give a description of the universal definable G-ambit and of the semigroup operation on it. We find a natural epimorphism from the Ellis group of this flow to the definable Bohr compactification of G, that is to the quotient ${G^{\rm{*}}}/G_M^{{\rm{*}}00}$ (where G* is the interpretation of G in a monster model). More generally, we obtain these results locally, i.e., in the category of Δ-definable G-flows for any fixed set Δ of formulas of an appropriate form. In particular, we define local connected components $G_{{\rm{\Delta }},M}^{{\rm{*}}00}$ and $G_{{\rm{\Delta }},M}^{{\rm{*}}000}$, and show that ${G^{\rm{*}}}/G_{{\rm{\Delta }},M}^{{\rm{*}}00}$ is the Δ-definable Bohr compactification of G. We also note that some deeper arguments from [14] can be adapted to our context, showing for example that our epimorphism from the Ellis group to the Δ-definable Bohr compactification factors naturally yielding a continuous epimorphism from the Δ-definable generalized Bohr compactification to the Δ-definable Bohr compactification of G. Finally, we propose to view certain topological-dynamic and model-theoretic invariants as Polish structures which leads to some observations and questions.


1992 ◽  
Vol 45 (3) ◽  
pp. 399-413 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul Milnes

The consideration of compact right topological groups goes back at least to a paper of Ellis in 1958, where it is shown that a flow is distal if and only if the enveloping semigroup of the flow is such a group (now called the Ellis group of the distal flow). Later Ellis, and also Namioka, proved that a compact right topological group admits a left invariant probability measure. As well, Namioka proved that there is a strong structure theorem for compact right topological groups. More recently, John Pym and the author strengthened this structure theorem enough to be able to establish the existence of Haar measure on a compact right topological group, a probability measure that is invariant under all continuous left and right translations, and is unique as such. Examples of compact right topological groups have been considered earlier. In the present paper, we give concrete representations of several Ellis groups coming from low dimensional nilpotent Lie groups. We study these compact right topological groups, and two others, in some detail, paying attention in particular to the structure theorem and Haar measure, and to the question: is Haar measure uniquely determined by left invariance alone? (It is uniquely determined by right invariance alone.) To assist in answering this question, we develop some sufficient conditions for a positive answer. We suspect that one of the examples, a compact right topological group coming from the Euclidean group of the plane, does not satisfy these conditions; we don't know if the question has a positive answer for this group.


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