Let $A\in\operatorname{SL}(d,\mathbb{Z})$ be an irreducible positive matrix, i. e. $A=(a_{i,j})_{1\leq i,j\leq d}$ with $a_{i,j}\in\mathbb{Z}_{>0}$. From the Perron-Frobenius theorem, we know that $A$ has one real eigenvalue $\lambda_1>1$ whose absolute value is strictly larger than any other eigenvalues. Denote all eigenvalues of $A$ by $$ \lambda_1>|\lambda_2|\geq|\lambda_3|\geq\cdots\cdots\geq|\lambda_d|. $$ What can we say about $|\lambda_2|$, does it have $|\lambda_2|<1$?
If the answer is no, is that possible we have other conditions guarantee $|\lambda_2|<1$?
My feeling here is that $A$ has determinant 1, if $\lambda_1$ is large enough, it may possible that all other eigenvalues have absolutely values smaller than 1. So maybe $A$ has some type of symmetry, like some control between $\min\{a_{i,j}\}$ and $\max\{a_{i,j}\}$ which $A^n$ also satisfies for every $n\geq1$.