The object of study of this very short post are groups of the form
where
. We will stick to the standard choice of generators
and look at their associated (undirected) Cayley graph
and boundary space
. Recall that the Cayley graph of
is the graph given the
Recall that the Cayley graph of
is the graph given the following data
- Vertices

- Edges
are those
for which there is a
such that
.
It turns out that the Cayley graph of
is a tree on which
acts by left multiplication. Heuristically, one could think of this tree as a combinatorial object where the vertices are reduced words in
. Increasing the word length corresponds to going outward on the branches of the tree, while there is only one way to reduce the word length (by multiplying from the left by the inverse of the first element) and corresponds to moving closer to the root of the tree.
Exercise) Show that in the special case when
one can write
as the union of all cosets
. Can we do the same for
?
Let
be a finitely presented group in
-generators. The word metric on
(with respect to the generators
) is a metric on
determined by
![]()
This turns out to be a metric which depends upon the choice of generating set
only up to quasi-isometric isomorphisms of
, hence properties which are invariant with respect to this relation are in a sense intrinsic to the group itself (this line of reasoning is at the heart of geometric group theory). Similarly one can define a length function on the graph
by saying each edge has length one and the distance between two vertices equals the shortest path between them.
Exercise) Show that the identity map
is is an isometry with respect to the length metric on
and the word metric on
if we pick the same generating set
in both cases and a quasi-isometric imbedding regardless of the generating set.
Gromov boundaries of free products
With
as above, the Cayley graph is a tree with vertices of valence
![]()
With respect to the length metric, any tree is a hyperbolic space in the sense that all geodesic triangles are “slim” (we don’t go into details here), hence a Gromov boundary can be defined. This boundary consists of all infinite geodesic rays, that is non repeating paths
, starting from a common fixed point
.
In our case the boundary
consists of all geodesic rays starting form the identity vertex
Any choice of vertex would work here, as the resulting space is invariant of choice of base point up to
-equivariant homeomorphism. In the combinatorial view, the space
consists of all infinite sequences of reduced words of
. The topology of
is determined by the local neighborhood basis at a point
given by
![]()
where
![]()
The action of
on
is by left multiplication and is easily seen to be continuous with respect to the above topology.
The boundary can be decomposed into two disjoint sets
where
consists of those sequences which eventually repeat a fixed reduced ad infinitum, while
is its complement.
Exercise) Show that
and that
.
Exercise) Show that
and
are both dense in
. Conclude that the sets are neither open nor closed in
hence cannot be Cantor sets themselves.
Exercise) Show that
acts freely on
(meaning if
then
). Show that every point in
is a fixed point of some
.
Spoiler) If
then there is a
and a reduced word
such that
and
. It should be clear that the element
fixes
and that
![]()
For my own sanity, I like to think of
as representing the rational numbers while
the irrationals. The justification is manifold (in the non-mathematical sense). For one
is countable, while
is not. Secondly, the rational numbers are precisely those that can be expressed with a finite (possibly infinitely repeating) pattern in its decimal expansion (or in any base for that mater). For instance, if
, then
correspondence to the rational numbers between in
and
is in a 1-1 with the irrationals through binary expansions. For all irrationals this correspondence is 1-1, but for certain rationals this correspondence will be 2-1, for others it is 1-1. A point
has two base
expansions if and only if
is an integer for some
which happens if and only if the expansion is finite in base
. For the decimal expansion this amounts to
with
divisible by
or
. In the case of
one can find a concrete map
to the geodesic boundary of the real hyperbolic plane which is surjective, equivariant (with respect to the action of
by Mobius transformations), and sends
2-1 to the rational numbers while sending
1-1 to the irrational numbers. I’m struggling to find the article where I read this fact, so for the moment I will leave it without a reference.
Dynamic asymptotic dimension
One says that an action of a discrete group
on a compact space
has dynamic asymptotic dimension less then or equal to
if for any finite set
there exists an open cover
of
for which the
orbits entirely contained within some
are all finite. More explicitly, for any
, sets
![]()
are all finite. Dynamic asymptotic dimension generalizes the notion of asymptotic dimension introduced by Gromov in the sense that a countable group
has finite asymptotic dimension if and only if the action of
on its Stone-Cech compactification has finite asymptotic dynamic dimension (p. 158 of this wonderful book). There seems to be two main use cases for finite dynamic asymptotic dimension- one is to determine the K-theory the associated crossed product C*-algebra and the other is to bound the nuclear dimension of said algebra (see for instance this article). I’m sure many more exist, but these are the ones I have seen.
Exercise) Prove that the dynamic asymptotic dimension of the system
is not finite.
Spoiler) Here one can use either that the fact that we have stabilizer subgroups which are not locally finite (i.e.
), which is sufficient to prove the claim. Alternatively one can construct a counterexample explicitly as follows – for two elements
the sets
![]()
forms a local neighborhood basis at the point
. Now use
and show that each such local basis element contains an infinite
-orbit. Since for any open cover one of these basis elements would have to be entirely contained in one of the covering sets, this would be enough to show the dynamic asymptotic dimension is not finite.
