1. Introduction
The topology at infinity concerns those geometric and topological asymptotic notions that are important both for non-compact manifolds and for discrete groups. For instance, the question of whether a contractible manifold is simply connected at infinity is central in the study of the topology and geometry at infinity of the manifold because it assures that its “infinity” is as tame as possible, namely that of the Euclidean space (see [
1]). Here “simply connected at infinity” (abbreviated sci) roughly means that the infinity of the space is simply connected or, more precisely, that any loop “at infinity” bounds a disk that is close to infinity. This notion can be defined and studied for finitely presented groups, too (see, e.g., [
2]). To better understand the asymptotic topological behaviour of those finitely presented groups that are simply connected at infinity, in [
3], a function was defined that, in some sense, measures how a group is sci, and the growth of this function, called the sci-growth, is another example of a geometric property of discrete groups (i.e., a quasi-isometry invariant for finitely presented groups, following Gromov’s viewpoint [
4]). A very similar function was defined and studied in [
5,
6]. This is homologous in dimension 0 of the sci-growth for one-ended groups, and it measures the “depth” of the bounded components of the complement of metric balls in the Cayley graph of the group. The growth of this function is also a geometric invariant of finitely presented groups, called the end-depth (see [
5,
6]).
In this paper, we will study these notions, together with similarly related ones, for some specific geometric classes of discrete groups.
2. Definitions
Let be a metric space and D, E two subsets of it. The distance between D and E, denoted , is defined as . For any point , we will write and to denote the sphere and the ball in X of radius r, with centre x.
We now recall the all-important definition of the number of ends of a metric space. Let be a locally compact and connected metric space. For any compact subset K of X, we can consider the number of unbounded connected components of the complement and write it as . The number of ends of space X is the supremum of for all compacts .
If , we say that X is a one-ended metric space. This roughly means that there is only “one way to go to infinity” (at least outside large compacts).
Now, consider a finitely generated group
(this simply means that
G has a finite generating set
S). The
Cayley graph associated with the pair
, denoted by
, can be defined as the directed graph with one vertex associated with each element of the group and edges
from
g to
h, with
, whenever
. The Cayley graph strictly depends on the choice of a generating set, and, for instance, it is connected if and only if
S generates the whole group
G. If
is the word metric in
G (where the distance between two elements
g and
h is the minimum possible length of a word using elements from
), the Cayley graph
with the metric
also becomes a locally compact and connected metric space. In this way, one can define the number of ends of the Cayley graph,
, and it turns out that the number of ends is actually independent of the finite generating set chosen [
7].
Thus, the number of ends of the finitely generated group G, , can be (well-)defined as the number of ends of (one of) its Cayley graph , for some finite generating set S.
A finitely generated group is
one-ended whenever its Cayley graph, with respect to one of its finite generating sets, is a one-ended metric space. Note also that, for finitely generated groups, the number of ends is a quasi-isometry invariant [
7]. Here we meet the viewpoint of Gromov [
4]: two metric spaces are quasi-isometric if they are undistinguishable when looked at from far away. The interesting geometric conditions of groups are those properties that are invariant under quasi-isometry. This is the right way in order to understand the global, asymptotic, geometric behaviour of discrete groups.
One of the oldest results concerning the ends of groups is the well-known result of Hopf [
7,
8], which says that a finitely generated group can have only 0, 1, 2, or infinitely many ends (a Cantor set). Obviously, a finitely generated group is finite if and only if
. On the other hand, Stallings’ Theorem on the ends of groups [
9] states that
G has more than one end if and only if it admits a nontrivial decomposition as an amalgamated free product or an HNN extension over a finite subgroup. Nowadays, this is considered the first result in geometric group theory (for proof, see [
7,
10]). Finally, in 1983, M. Gromov gave a very fast proof for this theorem using minimal surfaces [
4].
2.1. Growth Function of the End
We now need a digression on growth functions. Let be two real functions. One says that the growth of the function f is at most the growth of the function g, and one writes if there exist three constants , with , such that, for any , the following holds: . If and , then one says that the functions f and g have the same growth, and one writes .
It is easy to see that is an equivalence relation. The growth rate of a function f is then defined as the growth of the equivalence class of the function f. For instance, we will say that f has linear growth whenever .
With all these notions, we are able to properly define the end-depth of a group.
Definition 1. Let be a finitely generated one-ended group and let be its Cayley graph. For any real number , let be the set of all such that any two points in can be joined by a path lying outside the ball . The function is called the end-depth function of X.
Remark that the end-depth function itself depends on the generating set of the group, but its growth rate does not, as shown in [
6]. Actually, the end-depth growth is even linear for any finitely presented group [
5].
Here we want to present a more precise and clearer description for the understanding of the end-depth function following [
11]. If we consider a finitely generated group
, with a finite generating set
S and its Cayley graph
associated with
S, then for any positive real number
r, the set of connected components of the complement of the
r-ball is finite, i.e.,
, for some integer number
m. Whenever group
G is one-ended, then in the set
, there is only one unbounded connected component. Let
be this unique unbounded connected component and denote by
, the union of the bounded components of
. We can make the following useful observations:
The set is empty if and only if .
Otherwise, whenever has at least one bounded connected component, then, for any , any path joining x to an element must go through the ball . Thus, for any , one has: . This implies that .
On the other hand, for any
with
, we have that
. This implies that the two pints
y and
z can be joined by a path lying outside the ball
, and so we find that
. Hence, we can obtain an explicit formula for the function
:
This equation makes us understand in what sense the end-depth function gives a measure of the depth of the bounded connected components of .
Furthermore, from Equation (
1), we can also deduce that there exists a bounded connected component
P of
and at least one of its elements
such that
.
2.2. Other End-Topological Notions
Before stating our results, we need to introduce some more topological tameness conditions at infinity for manifolds and discrete groups.
Recall that a ray in a non-compact topological space X is just a proper map (where “proper” means that the inverse image of a compact subset is compact too). Two rays and are said to converge to the same end of X if, for any compact subset , there exists a real number T such that and are contained in the same component of . (Note that the set of rays modulo this relation actually coincides with is the set of ends of X, as defined above).
The next notion, called
semistability at infinity, is an old topological property much used in the study of the topological shape of ends of finitely presented groups (see [
12]). If a finitely presented group is semistable at infinity, then subtle invariants of the group can be defined (such as the so-called fundamental group at infinity, see [
13]).
An end of X is said to be semistable if any two rays of X converging to this end are properly homotopic. This notion is equivalent to the following fact: for any ray r that converges to the end and for any natural number n, there exists a such that any loop at r with the image outside can be pushed (relative to r) to infinity by a homotopy within . Finally, a finitely presented group is semistable at infinity if all of its ends are semistable.
Definition 2. Let X be a metric space, e an end of X and r a ray converging to e. The semistability function is defined as the smallest N such that, for any and any loop l based on r lying in there exists a homotopy relative to r and supported within , which pushes l to a loop in .
Remark 1. Notice that a semistable end has a well-defined semistability function.
Let G be a one-ended, finitely presented group. Denote by the semistability function of the space with respect to its only end, where X is a compact space with fundamental group G and its universal cover. It is easy to see that the growth of is independent of the space X (i.e., if Y is another compact space with , then one has ).
Remark 2. The proof of the quasi-isometry invariance of the end-depth [6] (and that of the sci-growth [3]) can be used to show that the semistability function for semistable infinity groups is also a geometric property (i.e., invariant under quasi-isometries). Lemma 1. For a one-ended, semistable infinity group G, the end-depth is bounded by the semistability function .
Proof. Let x be a point in . The semistability condition implies that the constant loop x is a homotope of loop out of for any large enough N, with a homotopy in . Thus x can be joined to a point of by a path in . Since G is one-ended, there exists such that any two points out of can be joined out of . Hence any is joined by the path , which sits outside . This means that . □
Another all-important topological notion at infinity, possibly the most powerful one (see, e.g., [
1,
14]), is the simple connectivity at infinity.
Definition 3. A connected, locally compact, topological space X with is simply connected at infinity (abbreviated sci, or ) if for each compact there exists a larger compact such that any closed loop in is null homotopic in .
This notion can be extended to a group-theoretical framework as follows (for more details, see [
2]):
Definition 4. A finitely generated group G is simply connected at infinity if, for some (equivalently for any) finite complex X such that , one has that (where is the universal covering space of X).
In order to measure the growth of the simple connectivity at infinity, the following function was introduced in [
3]:
Definition 5. Let X be a simply connected metric space. The rate of vanishing of , denoted by , is the smallest such that any loop lying outside the ball of radius bounds a 2-disk out of .
It was proven in [
3] that the growth rate (namely the equivalence class) of
is a geometric invariant of discrete groups. More precisely, if
G is a finitely presented group,
is the universal covering space of a compact simplicial complex
, with
, the function
is a quasi-isometry invariant of
G.
If is well-defined and linear, one says that group G has linear sci-growth.
Proposition 1. If a finitely presented group G is simply connected at infinity, then .
Proof. This is proven in [
5] (Proposition 2.5). □
Remark 3. For topological spaces that are k-connected at infinity, we can define the function such that any k-sphere outside bounds a -sphere out of .
For general metric spaces that are not Cayley complexes, these functions can have arbitrary large growth. In fact, let be a real function and let be the set where is the equivalence relation (here is the cone of the k-dimensional sphere of height ). Now, consider the real half-line and attach to any n the cone . Obviously, the resulting space is one-ended, k-connected at infinity, and whose function is equal to . Hence the space has the same growth as any arbitrarily chosen function f.