15
$\begingroup$

I'm interested in general heuristics where, for specific algebraic structures, we introduce new maps that are "almost" homomorphisms (or "almost" isomorphisms) but not quite so. Here are some that I have encountered in group theory (and may also be used in ring theory and commutative/noncommutative algebra):

  1. A "pseudo-homomorphism" (sometimes also called "quasi-homomorphism") which is a set map for groups whose restriction to any abelian subgroup is a homomorphism. In other words, if two elements commute, then the image of the product is the product of the images. General idea: require the composition with certain kinds of injective maps to be homomorphisms.
  2. A "1-homomorphism" which is a set map for groups whose restriction to any cyclic subgroup is a homomorphism. General idea: require that the restriction to any subalgebra generated by at most $k$ elements is a homomorphism. Note that for algebras defined using at most 2-ary operations, the only interesting case is $k = 1$.
  3. An element map that sends subgroups to subgroups. The induced map on the lattice of subgroups is termed a "projectivity". General idea: Require the map to induce a map on some derivative structure (e.g., the lattice of subalgebras) that looks like it could have come from a homomorphism.

My main interest is from a group theory perspective but I'd also be interested in constructions for other algebraic structures.

ADDED LATER: There have been a lot of interesting examples here. My original focus was to look at properties of maps that could be considered, at least in principle, between two arbitrary objects. Preferably something that could be composed to give a new category-of-sorts. But there've been some interesting examples of maps that go to fixed target groups and whose definition uses additional information about the structure of those target groups. These could also be of potential interest, so please feel free to give such examples too.

$\endgroup$
10
  • 4
    $\begingroup$ My understanding is that geometric group theorists use "quasimorphisms" a lot: lamington.wordpress.com/2009/06/04/quasimorphisms-and-laws $\endgroup$ Feb 8, 2010 at 19:56
  • $\begingroup$ That concept of quasimorphism, and its application, are very interesting! But I don't think that the framework I have here matches that concept, because it is a map to the real numbers. (Alas, the word "quasi-()-morphism" is overloaded). $\endgroup$
    – Vipul Naik
    Feb 8, 2010 at 20:13
  • $\begingroup$ Vipul, I don't understand your objection. A quasimorphism is by definition a map f:G->R such that |f(gh)-f(g)-f(h)| is bounded for all g,h. In other words, it's 'almost' a homomorphism from G to the additive group of R. $\endgroup$
    – HJRW
    Feb 8, 2010 at 21:16
  • $\begingroup$ I meant multiplicative group, of course. $\endgroup$
    – HJRW
    Feb 8, 2010 at 21:17
  • $\begingroup$ You're right, it's sort of like that, but the distinguishing feature is that there is a fixed "target", so the notion of composition doesn't make sense. I think it is something in the nature of a "norm". It just so happened that I was interested in things that can be composed end to end to form a new category. $\endgroup$
    – Vipul Naik
    Feb 8, 2010 at 22:25

9 Answers 9

6
$\begingroup$

Let $G$ and $G'$ be groups. A Freiman homomorphism of order $s$ from a $A\subset G$ to $G'$ is a map $\phi\colon A\to G$ such $$\phi(a_1)\phi(a_2)\cdots\phi(a_s)=\phi(a_1a_2\cdots a_s)$$ for any $s$ (not necessarily distinct) elements $a_1,a_2,\ldots,a_s\in A$. The Freiman homomorphism are the correct notion of equivalence between sets in additive combinatorics. For example, if $A$ and $B$ are Freiman $2$-isomorphic, then $\lvert A+A\rvert=\lvert B+B\rvert$. There are other versions of almost morphisms that arise naturally in combinatorial number theory. For instance, one of the equivalent versions of the polynomial Freiman-Ruzsa conjecture (for $(\mathbb{Z}/2\mathbb{Z})^n$) asserts that if $\phi\colon (\mathbb{Z}/2\mathbb{Z})^n\to (\mathbb{Z}/2\mathbb{Z})^n$ is a map for which $\phi(x+y)-\phi(x)-\phi(y)$ takes only $K$ values, then $\phi$ can be written as $\phi=\phi_0+\psi$ where $\phi_0$ is a genuine linear map, and $\psi$ takes only $K^{O(1)}$ values.

Another interesting example of an `almost morphism', this time in non-algebraic setting, are Lipschitz maps between metric spaces. A true morphism of metric spaces is supposed to preserve distances, but there are very few of them. However, Lipschitz embeddings are much more plentiful, and give rise to beautiful geometry, with many applications (notably in theoretical computer science).

$\endgroup$
5
$\begingroup$

There is a construction of the real numbers directly from the integers using quasihomomorphisms of Z. http://www.maths.mq.edu.au/~street/EffR.pdf

$\endgroup$
2
$\begingroup$

Related to Henry Wilton's comments: the following might not quite be what you're looking for, but seems interesting given that quasi-morphisms have been mentioned. I'm doing this from memory so if there's a gap, someone please let me know!

Let $E$ be a Hilbert space, $B(E)$ the algebra of all bounded linear operators on $E$. (Even the case $E={\mathbb R}^n$ is of interest.) Fix a small $\epsilon>0$. Then there exists $\delta>0$ with the following property:

Let $G$ be an abelian group, and let $f:G \to B(E)$ be a bounded function (i.e. $\sup_{x\in G} \| f(x) \| < \infty$) which satisfies $$ \sup_{x,y}\| f(x)f(y) - f(xy) \| \leq \delta. $$ Then there is some representation $\rho: G \to B(E)$ such that $\sup_x \| f(x)- \rho(x)\| \leq \epsilon$.

So, less formally, bounded "almost representations" of abelian groups are "near to" genuine representations.

I imagine this could be proved by an averaging argument: the way I learned of this result is as a special case of a more general one, in which the word "abelian" is replaced by the word "amenable", and the word "Hilbert" is replaced by "nice reflexive Banach". That in turn is a special case of a general result on almost multiplicative maps between Banach algebras satisfying certain conditions (due to B. E. Johnson).

Anyway, sorry this has wandered off track. The point was to say that there are contexts where things which are close to being group homomorphisms $H\to K$, might under a small perturbation be genuine homomorphisms when restricted to a specified abelian subgroup of $H$. However, in general this can't be done so as to work simultaneously for all abelian subgroups of $H$.

$\endgroup$
2
$\begingroup$

I know this answer is late, but just recently someone has done exactly what you asked about. The quasihomomorphisms $\mathbb{Z}$ to $\mathbb{Z}$ that are used in the construction of $\mathbb{R}$ (A'Campo has done this) are generalised to (equivalence classes of) maps between arbitrary abelian groups. This actually results in a category, as can be seen here:

https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/binaries/content/assets/science/mi/scripties/bachelor/2017-2018/hermans-bscthesis.pdf

$\endgroup$
1
$\begingroup$

This may be further afield: maps which preserve or promote some relation, while "encoding" the basic operation. I dimly recall groupoid self-maps called cryptomorphisms, which had some property like f(a*b)= p(f(a))*q(f(b)) for p and q some permutations on the set. Also, in classifying Latin squares, there is some notion of isotopy and some other relations that allow a quasigroup table to be related to others through certain maps.

There are similar examples where one is concerned with preserving some property like essential arity (e.g. binary operations which depend on both variables), and will insist on maps between structures that share or preserve such a property. Unfortunately all I remember at the moment is some variant of Mazurkiewicz, who along with similarly named people (speaking as an ignorant American) used variants of morphism to help study groupoids and other structures, partly to understand their spectra (number of algebras/operations/essential operations on an underlying set of n elements, n varying over finite numbers).

As an example of something I haven't seen but can imagine: an inequality map, where you care that f(A*B) <> f(C*D) if A*B <> C*D .

I invite others to add to this post as details occur and memories sharpen.

Gerhard "Ask Me About System Design" Paseman, 2010.02.09

$\endgroup$
1
$\begingroup$

You could also do the obvious generalization of quasimorphisms:

Consider groups with a metric and look at maps maps $\phi: G \to H$ such that $d_H(\phi(g_1)\phi(g_2),\phi(g_1g_2))$ is bounded in some sense.

For instance Lipschitz maps $\phi: (G,d_G) \to (H,d_H)$ such that $d_H(\phi(g_1)\phi(g_2),\phi(g_1g_2))$ is uniformly bounded, form a category.

Homogeneous quasimorphisms (maps $G \to \mathbb{R}$) are actual homomorphisms on abelian subgroups and are invariant under conjugation. By adjusting the above setup, perhaps one could get such features as well.

$\endgroup$
1
$\begingroup$

Given an ideal in a ring $I\subset R$, we have the associated graded ring $$\mathrm{gr}_I(R) = \bigoplus_{i=0}^{\infty}I^i/I^{i+1}$$ One can form the initial form map $\iota: R \to \mathrm{gr}_I(R)$, sending $R \ni r \mapsto \bar{r} \in I^i/I^{i+1}$,

where $I^i$ is the largest power of $I$ containing $r$.

This map is not in general a homomorphism, but we do have that either $\iota(f+g) = \iota(f) + \iota(g)$ or $\iota(f+g) = 0$.

I stated this for rings, but it may be better to state for modules.

For reference you can consult either https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Associated_graded_ring or Eisenbud's Commutative Algebra (I think that was where I read about it).

$\endgroup$
0
$\begingroup$

I wouldn't rank this as any sort of answer, but one time when looking at set maps from one group to another I discovered that such things were sometimes called "near rings" and another thing related to them are "composition rings". If you haven't heard those before, it might be worth looking them up. At the very least, your maps will be elements of something like a "near ring" that satisfy some additional property.

$\endgroup$
1
  • $\begingroup$ Thanks! I think set maps from a group to itself form a near-ring (with pointwise product as the (possibly noncommutative) addition and composition as the multiplication). The distributivity law holds only one way. When the group is abelian, then the endomorphisms form a sub-near-ring that is in fact distributive both ways and that becomes the endomorphism ring. So perhaps set maps between different groups form a near-ringoid? $\endgroup$
    – Vipul Naik
    Feb 8, 2010 at 22:28
0
$\begingroup$

In operator algebras, there is something called an asymptotic morphism. If $A$ and $B$ are $C^*$-algebras, an asymptotic morphism is a family of maps $T_h : A \to B$ for $0 < h \le 1$, such that for any $a,b \in A$ and $\lambda \in \mathbb{C}$, $$ T_h(a + \lambda b) - T_h(a) - \lambda T_h(b) \to 0 $$ $$ T_h(a^*) - T_h(a)^* \to 0 \\ $$ $$ T_h(ab) - T_h(a)T_h(b) \to 0 $$ as $h \to 0$.

These are used to construct maps in K-theory which don't come from $*$-homomorphisms.

$\endgroup$

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.