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Atiyah conjecture

In mathematics, the Atiyah conjecture is a collective term for a number of statements about restrictions on possible values of l 2 {\displaystyle l^{2}} -Betti numbers.

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History

In 1976, Michael Atiyah introduced l 2 {\displaystyle l^{2}} -cohomology of manifolds with a free co-compact action of a discrete countable group (e.g. the universal cover of a compact manifold together with the action of the fundamental group by deck transformations.) Atiyah defined also l 2 {\displaystyle l^{2}} -Betti numbers as von Neumann dimensions of the resulting l 2 {\displaystyle l^{2}} -cohomology groups, and computed several examples, which all turned out to be rational numbers. He therefore asked if it is possible for l 2 {\displaystyle l^{2}} -Betti numbers to be irrational.

Since then, various researchers asked more refined questions about possible values of l 2 {\displaystyle l^{2}} -Betti numbers, all of which are customarily referred to as "Atiyah conjecture".

Results

Many positive results were proven by Peter Linnell. For example, if the group acting is a free group, then the l 2 {\displaystyle l^{2}} -Betti numbers are integers.

The most general question open as of late 2011 is whether l 2 {\displaystyle l^{2}} -Betti numbers are rational if there is a bound on the orders of finite subgroups of the group which acts. In fact, a precise relationship between possible denominators and the orders in question is conjectured; in the case of torsion-free groups, this statement generalizes the zero-divisors conjecture. For a discussion see the article of B. Eckmann.

In the case there is no such bound, Tim Austin showed in 2009 that l 2 {\displaystyle l^{2}} -Betti numbers can assume transcendental values. Later it was shown that in that case they can be any non-negative real numbers.

  • Atiyah, M. F (1976). "Elliptic operators, discrete groups and von Neumann algebras". Colloque "Analyse et Topologie" en l'Honneur de Henri Cartan (Orsay, 1974). Paris: Soc. Math. France. pp. 43–72. Astérisque, No. 32–33.
  • Austin, Tim (2013). "Rational group ring elements with kernels having irrational dimension". Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society. 107 (6): 1424–1448. arXiv:0909.2360. doi:10.1112/plms/pdt029.