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Bounded Cohomology of Discrete Groups [Hardback]

  • Formāts: Hardback, 193 pages, height x width: 254x178 mm, weight: 535 g
  • Sērija : Mathematical Surveys and Monographs
  • Izdošanas datums: 30-Dec-2017
  • Izdevniecība: American Mathematical Society
  • ISBN-10: 1470441462
  • ISBN-13: 9781470441463
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 193 pages, height x width: 254x178 mm, weight: 535 g
  • Sērija : Mathematical Surveys and Monographs
  • Izdošanas datums: 30-Dec-2017
  • Izdevniecība: American Mathematical Society
  • ISBN-10: 1470441462
  • ISBN-13: 9781470441463
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
The theory of bounded cohomology, introduced by Gromov in the late 1980s, has had powerful applications in geometric group theory and the geometry and topology of manifolds, and has been the topic of active research continuing to this day. This monograph provides a unified, self-contained introduction to the theory and its applications, making it accessible to a student who has completed a first course in algebraic topology and manifold theory. The book can be used as a source for research projects for master's students, as a thorough introduction to the field for graduate students, and as a valuable landmark text for researchers, providing both the details of the theory of bounded cohomology and links of the theory to other closely related areas.

The first part of the book is devoted to settling the fundamental definitions of the theory, and to proving some of the (by now classical) results on low-dimensional bounded cohomology and on bounded cohomology of topological spaces. The second part describes applications of the theory to the study of the simplicial volume of manifolds, to the classification of circle actions, to the analysis of maximal representations of surface groups, and to the study of flat vector bundles with a particular emphasis on the possible use of bounded cohomology in relation with the Chern conjecture. Each chapter ends with a discussion of further reading that puts the presented results in a broader context.

Recenzijas

The author manages a near perfect equilibrium between necessary technicalities (always well motivated) and geometric intuition, leading the readers from the first simple definition to the most striking applications of the theory in 13 very pleasant chapters. This book can serve as an ideal textbook for a graduate topics course on the subject and become the much-needed standard reference on Gromov's beautiful theory." Michelle Bucher

"The author very well succeeds to present to the reader an overview of all important applications of bounded cohomology." Thilo Kuessner, Zentralblatt MATH

"This book provides a careful, uniform treatment of the main results of bounded cohomology of discrete groups and its applications, also reflecting recent developments. Moreover, important techniques are highlighted...The 'further readings' sections form a valuable collection of references to current research that will be helpful both for students and for researchers." Clara Löh, Mathematical Reviews

Introduction ix
Chapter 1 (Bounded) cohomology of groups
1(8)
1.1 Cohomology of groups
1(2)
1.2 The topological interpretation of group cohomology
3(1)
1.3 Bounded cohomology of groups
3(2)
1.4 The comparison map and exact bounded cohomology
5(1)
1.5 The bar resolution
5(1)
1.6 Topology and bounded cohomology
6(1)
1.7 Further readings
6(3)
Chapter 2 (Bounded) cohomology of groups in low degree
9(14)
2.1 (Bounded) group cohomology in degree zero and one
9(1)
2.2 Group cohomology in degree two
9(3)
2.3 Bounded group cohomology in degree two: quasimorphisms
12(1)
2.4 Homogeneous quasimorphisms
13(1)
2.5 Quasimorphisms on abelian groups
14(1)
2.6 The bounded cohomology of free groups in degree 2
15(1)
2.7 Homogeneous 2-cocycles
16(2)
2.8 The image of the comparison map
18(2)
2.9 Further readings
20(3)
Chapter 3 Amenability
23(10)
3.1 Abelian groups are amenable
25(1)
3.2 Other amenable groups
26(1)
3.3 Amenability and bounded cohomology
27(1)
3.4 Johnson's characterization of amenability
28(1)
3.5 A characterization of finite groups via bounded cohomology
29(1)
3.6 Further readings
30(3)
Chapter 4 (Bounded) group cohomology via resolutions
33(20)
4.1 Relative injectivity
33(2)
4.2 Resolutions of F-modules
35(3)
4.3 The classical approach to group cohomology via resolutions
38(1)
4.4 The topological interpretation of group cohomology revisited
39(1)
4.5 Bounded cohomology via resolutions
40(1)
4.6 Relatively injective normed r-modules
41(1)
4.7 Resolutions of normed Γ-modules
41(3)
4.8 More on amenability
44(1)
4.9 Amenable spaces
45(3)
4.10 Alternating cochains
48(1)
4.11 Further readings
49(4)
Chapter 5 Bounded cohoniology of topological spaces
53(12)
5.1 Basic properties of bounded cohoniology of spaces
53(1)
5.2 Bounded singular cochains as relatively injective modules
54(2)
5.3 The aspherical case
56(1)
5.4 Ivanov's contracting homotopy
56(2)
5.5 Groniov's Theorem
58(1)
5.6 Alternating cochains
59(1)
5.7 Relative bounded cohoniology
60(2)
5.8 Further readings
62(3)
Chapter 6 L1-homology and duality
65(12)
6.1 Normed chain complexes and their topological duals
65(1)
6.2 L1-homology of groups and spaces
66(1)
6.3 Duality: first results
67(1)
6.4 Some results by Matsumoto and Morita
68(2)
6.5 Injectivity of the comparison map
70(1)
6.6 The translation principle
71(2)
6.7 Gromov equivalence theorem
73(2)
6.8 Further readings
75(2)
Chapter 7 Simplicial volume
77(10)
7.1 The case with non-empty boundary
77(1)
7.2 Elementary properties of the simplicial volume
78(1)
7.3 The simplicial volume of Riemannian manifolds
79(1)
7.4 Simplicial volume of gluings
80(2)
7.5 Simplicial volume and duality
82(1)
7.6 The simplicial volume of products
83(1)
7.7 Fiber bundles with amenable fibers
83(1)
7.8 Further readings
84(3)
Chapter 8 The proportionality principle
87(18)
8.1 Continuous cohoniology of topological spaces
87(1)
8.2 Continuous cochains as relatively injective modules
88(2)
8.3 Continuous cochains as strong resolutions of R
90(2)
8.4 Straightening in non-positive curvature
92(1)
8.5 Continuous cohoniology versus singular cohoniology
92(1)
8.6 The transfer map
93(2)
8.7 Straightening and the volume form
95(2)
8.8 Proof of the proportionality principle
97(1)
8.9 The simplicial volume of hyperbolic manifolds
97(1)
8.10 Hyperbolic straight simplices
98(1)
8.11 The seminorm of the volume form
99(1)
8.12 The case of surfaces
100(1)
8.13 The simplicial volume of negatively curved manifolds
100(1)
8.14 The simplicial volume of flat manifolds
101(1)
8.15 Further readings
101(4)
Chapter 9 Additivity of the simplicial volume
105(8)
9.1 A cohomological proof of subadditivity
105(2)
9.2 A cohomological proof of Gromov additivity theorem
107(3)
9.3 Further readings
110(3)
Chapter 10 Group actions on the circle
113(18)
10.1 Homeomorphisms of the circle and the Euler class
113(1)
10.2 The bounded Euler class
114(1)
10.3 The (bounded) Euler class of a representation
115(1)
10.4 The rotation number of a homeomorphism
116(3)
10.5 Increasing degree one map of the circle
119(1)
10.6 Semi-conjugacy
120(2)
10.7 Ghys' Theorem
122(4)
10.8 The canonical real bounded Euler cocycle
126(3)
10.9 Further readings
129(2)
Chapter 11 The Euler class of sphere bundles
131(14)
11.1 Topological, smooth and linear sphere bundles
131(2)
11.2 The Euler class of a sphere bundle
133(3)
11.3 Classical properties of the Euler class
136(2)
11.4 The Euler class of oriented vector bundles
138(2)
11.5 The euler class of circle bundles
140(2)
11.6 Circle bundles Over surfaces
142(1)
11.7 Further readings
143(2)
Chapter 12 Milnor-Wood inequalities and maximal representations
145(24)
12.1 Flat sphere bundles
145(4)
12.2 The bounded Euler class of a flat circle bundle
149(2)
12.3 Milnor-Wood inequalities
151(3)
12.4 Flat circle bundles on surfaces with boundary
154(8)
12.5 Maximal representations
162(4)
12.6 Further readings
166(3)
Chapter 13 The bounded Euler class in higher dimensions and the Chern conjecture
169(12)
13.1 Ivanov-Turaev cocycle
169(4)
13.2 Representing cycles via simplicial cycles
173(1)
13.3 The bounded Euler class of a flat linear sphere bundle
174(4)
13.4 The Chern conjecture
178(1)
13.5 Further readings
179(2)
Index 181(4)
List of Symbols 185(2)
Bibliography 187
Roberto Frigerio, University of Pisa, Italy.