Zeta function of a group: Difference between revisions

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summing up over all subgroups of finite index in <math>G</math>.
summing up over all subgroups of finite index in <math>G</math>.


The coefficients <math>a_n(G)</math> are all finite when the group <math>G</math> is [[finitely genereated group|finitely generated]]. {{proofat|[[Finitely generated subgroups has finitely many subgroups of given finite index]]}}
The coefficients <math>a_n(G)</math> are all finite when the group <math>G</math> is [[finitely generated group|finitely generated]]. {{proofat|[[Finitely generated subgroups has finitely many subgroups of given finite index]]}}


==Facts==
==Facts==

Revision as of 04:47, 16 August 2013

Template:Analytic function wrt group

Definition

Let be a group. The zeta function of is defined as:

where denotes the number of subgroups of of index . Equivalently, it is:

summing up over all subgroups of finite index in .

The coefficients are all finite when the group is finitely generated. For full proof, refer: Finitely generated subgroups has finitely many subgroups of given finite index

Facts

Convergence

When the group is a PSG-group (viz, it has polynomial subgroup growth) then the zeta function is well-defined and is convergent for a value of for which grows at a rate that is strictly more than linear (for instance, quadratic or more). The zeta function is not convergent for other values of .

Euler product

When the group is a finitely generated torsion-free nilpotent group, we can get an Euler product formula, for the zeta function:

where

This is a consequence of the fact that any finite nilpotent group is a direct product of its Sylow subgroups.

External links

Definition links

Planetmath page