ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
We study the question of whether it is possible to determine a finitely generated group $G$ up to some notion of equivalence from the spectrum $mathrm{sp}(G)$ of $G$. We show that the answer is No in a strong sense. As the first example we present the collection of amenable 4-generated groups $G_omega$, $omegain{0,1,2}^mathbb N$, constructed by the second author in 1984. We show that among them there is a continuum of pairwise non-quasi-isometric groups with $mathrm{sp}(G_omega)=[-tfrac{1}{2},0]cup[tfrac{1}{2},1]$. Moreover, for each of these groups $G_omega$ there is a continuum of covering groups $G$ with the same spectrum. As the second example we construct a continuum of $2$-generated torsion-free step-3 solvable groups with the spectrum $[-1,1]$. In addition, in relation to the above results we prove a version of Hulanicki Theorem about inclusion of spectra for covering graphs.
We show that the spectrum of the Schrodinger operator on a finite, metric graph determines uniquely the connectivity matrix and the bond lengths, provided that the lengths are non-commensurate and the connectivity is simple (no parallel bonds between
Neural network applications have become popular in both enterprise and personal settings. Network solutions are tuned meticulously for each task, and designs that can robustly resolve queries end up in high demand. As the commercial value of accurate
In 1878, Jordan proved that if a finite group $G$ has a faithful representation of dimension $n$ over $mathbb{C}$, then $G$ has a normal abelian subgroup with index bounded above by a function of $n$. The same result fails if one replaces $mathbb{C}$
This note is devoted to the theory of projective limits of finite-dimensional Lie groups, as developed in the recent monograph ``The Lie Theory of Connected Pro-Lie Groups by K.H. Hofmann and S.A. Morris. We replace the original, highly non-trivial p
We give a complete characterization of the relationship between the shape of a Euclidean polygon and the symbolic dynamics of its billiard flow. We prove that the only pairs of tables that can have the same bounce spectrum are right-angled tables tha