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Article

On Factoring Groups into Thin Subsets

Department of Computer Science and Cybernetics, Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv, Academic Glushkov pr. 4d, 03680 Kyiv, Ukraine
Submission received: 2 April 2021 / Revised: 13 May 2021 / Accepted: 13 May 2021 / Published: 14 May 2021

Abstract

:
A subset X of a group G is called thin if, for every finite subset F of G, there exists a finite subset H of G such that F x F y = , x F y F = for all distinct x , y X \ H . We prove that every countable topologizable group G can be factorized G = A B into thin subsets A , B .
MSC:
20F69; 54C65

1. Introduction

Let G be a group, and [ G ] < ω denote the set of all finite subsets of G. A subset X of is called:
  • left thin if, for every F [ G ] < ω , there exists H [ G ] < ω such that F x F y = for all distinct x , y X \ H ;
  • right thin if, for every F [ G ] < ω , there exists H [ G ] < ω such that x F y F = for all distinct x , y X \ H ;
  • thin if X is left and right thin.
The notion of left thin subsets was introduced in [1]. For motivation to study left thin, right thin and thin subsets and some results and references, see Comments and surveys [2,3,4,5]. In asymptology, thin subsets play the part of discrete subsets (see Comments 1 and 2).
We recall that the product A B of subsets A , B of a group G is a factorization if G = A B and each element g G has the unique representation g = a b , a A , b B (equivalently, the subsets { a B : a A } are pairwise disjoint). For factorizations of groups into subsets, see [6].
Our goal is to prove the following theorem. By a countable set, we mean a countably infinite set. The group topology τ is supposed to be Hausdorff.
Theorem 1.
Let ( G , τ ) be a non-discrete countable topological group. Then G can be factorized G = A B into thin subsets A , B .

2. Proof

Proof of Theorem 1.
Let G = { g n : n < ω } , g 0 = e , e is the identity of G, F n = { g i : i n } .
Given two sequences ( a n ) n < ω , ( b n ) n < ω in G, we denote
A n = { a i , a i 1 : i n } , B n = { b i : i n } , A = n < ω A n , B = n < ω B n .
We want to choose ( a n ) n < ω , ( b n ) n < ω so that A B is a factorization of G and A , B are thin.
Let X , Y be subsets of G. We say that X Y is a partial factorization of G if the subsets { X y : y Y } are pairwise disjoint (equivalently, the subsets { Y x : x X } are pairwise disjoint).
We put a 0 = e , b 0 = e and suppose that a 0 , , a n and b 0 , , b n have been chosen so that the following conditions are satisfied
( 1 ) A n B n is a partial factorization of G and g n A n B n ;
( 2 ) F i b i F j b j = , b i F i b j F j = for all distinct i , j { 0 , , n } ;
( 3 ) F i a i F j a j = , a i F i a j F j = , F i a i 1 F j a j 1 = , a i 1 F i a j 1 F j = and
F i a i 1 F j a j , a i 1 F i a j F j = for all distinct i , j { 0 , , n } ;
( 4 ) if a i a i 1 then F i a i F i a i 1 = , a i F i a i 1 F i = , i { 0 , , n } .
We take the first element g m G \ A n B n , put g = g m and show that there exists a symmetric neighborhood U of e such that
( 5 ) ( A n { x , x 1 } ) ( B n { x g } ) is a partial factorization for each x U \ { e } .
We choose a symmetric neighborhood V of e such that ( A n { x , x 1 } ) B n is a partial factorization of G for each x V \ { e } .
Then we use A n = A n 1 , g G \ A n B n and e A n B n to choose a symmetric neighborhood U of e such that U V and
( A n { x , x 1 } ) B n ( A n { x , x 1 } ) x g = ,
equivalently, A n B n A n x g = , A n B n { x , x 1 } x g = , { x , x 1 } B n A n x g = , { x , x 1 } B n { x , x 1 } x g = for each x U \ { e } , so we get ( 5 ) . By the continuity of the group operations, the latter is possible because these 4 equalities hold for x = e .
If the set { x U : x 2 = e } is infinite then we use ( 5 ) and choose a n + 1 U , a n + 1 = a n + 1 1 and b n + 1 = a n + 1 g to satisfy ( 1 ) ( 3 ) with n + 1 in place of n. Otherwise, we choose a n + 1 U , a n + 1 a n + 1 1 and b n + 1 = a n + 1 g to satisfy ( 1 ) ( 4 ) .
After ω steps, we get the desired factorization G = A B . □

3. Comments

1. Given a set X, a family E of subsets of X × X is called a coarse structure on X if
  • each E E contains the diagonal X : = { ( x , x ) : x X } of X;
  • if E, E E then E E E and E 1 E , where E E = { ( x , y ) : z ( ( x , z ) E , ( z , y ) E ) } , E 1 = { ( y , x ) : ( x , y ) E } ;
  • if E E and X E E then E E .
Elements E E of the coarse structure are called entourages on X.
For x X and E E the set E [ x ] : = { y X : ( x , y ) E } is called the ball of radius E centered at x. Since E = x X ( { x } × E [ x ] ) , the entourage E is uniquely determined by the family of balls { E [ x ] : x X } . A subfamily E E is called a base of the coarse structure E if each set E E is contained in some E E .
The pair ( X , E ) is called a coarse space [7] or a ballean [8,9].
A subset B of X is called bounded if B E [ x ] for some E E and x X . A subset Y of X is called discrete if, for every E E , there exists a bounded subset B such that E [ x ] E [ y ] = for all distinct x , y Y \ B .
2. Formally, coarse spaces can be considered as asymptotic counterparts of uniform topological spaces. However, actually, this notion is rooted in geometry, geometrical group theory and combinatorics (see [7,8,10,11]).
Given a group G, we denote by E l and E r the coarse structures on G with the bases
{ { ( x , y ) : x F y } : F [ G ] < ω , e F } , { { ( x , y ) : x y F } : F [ G ] < ω , e F }
and note that a subset A of G is left (resp. right) thin if and only if A is discrete in the coarse space ( G , E l ) (resp. ( G , E r ) ).
3. By [12], every countable group G has a thin subset A such that G = A A 1 . By [13], every countable topological group G has a closed discrete subset A such that G = A A 1 . For thin subsets of topological groups and factorizations into dense subsets, see [14,15].
4. Can every countable group G be factorized G = A B into infinite subsets A , B ? By Theorem 1, an answer to the following question could be negative only in the case of a non-topologizable group G.
On the other hand, analyzing the proof, one can see that Theorem 1 remains true if all mappings x x g , x g x , g G , x x 1 and x x 2 are continuous at e. By [16], every countable group G admits a non-discrete Hausdorff topology in which all shifts and the inversion x x 1 are continuous.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

References

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Protasov, I. On Factoring Groups into Thin Subsets. Axioms 2021, 10, 89. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/axioms10020089

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Protasov I. On Factoring Groups into Thin Subsets. Axioms. 2021; 10(2):89. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/axioms10020089

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Protasov, Igor. 2021. "On Factoring Groups into Thin Subsets" Axioms 10, no. 2: 89. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/axioms10020089

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