In mathematics, a Fuchsian group is a Discrete group of PSL(2, R). The group PSL(2, R) can be regarded equivalently as a group of orientation-preserving isometry of the hyperbolic plane, or conformal transformations of the Unit disk, or conformal transformations of the upper half plane, so a Fuchsian group can be regarded as a group acting on any of these spaces. There are some variations of the definition: sometimes the Fuchsian group is assumed to be finitely generated, sometimes it is allowed to be a subgroup of PGL(2, R) (so that it contains orientation-reversing elements), and sometimes it is allowed to be a Kleinian group (a discrete subgroup of PSL(2, C)) which is conjugate to a subgroup of PSL(2, R).
Fuchsian groups are used to create of . In this case, the group may be called the Fuchsian group of the surface. In some sense, Fuchsian groups do for non-Euclidean geometry what crystallographic groups do for Euclidean geometry. Some Escher graphics are based on them (for the disc model of hyperbolic geometry).
General Fuchsian groups were first studied by , who was motivated by the paper , and therefore named them after Lazarus Fuchs.
The group PSL(2, R) acts on by linear fractional transformations (also known as Möbius transformations):
This action is faithful, and in fact PSL(2, R) is isomorphic to the group of all orientable isometry of .
A Fuchsian group may be defined to be a subgroup of PSL(2, R), which acts discontinuously on . That is,
An equivalent definition for to be Fuchsian is that be a discrete group, which means that:
Although discontinuity and discreteness are equivalent in this case, this is not generally true for the case of an arbitrary group of conformal homeomorphisms acting on the full Riemann sphere (as opposed to ). Indeed, the Fuchsian group PSL(2, Z) is discrete but has accumulation points on the real number line : elements of PSL(2, Z) will carry to every rational number, and the rationals Q are dense set in R.
This motivates the following definition of a Fuchsian group. Let Γ ⊂ PSL(2, C) act invariantly on a proper, open set disk Δ ⊂ C ∪ ∞, that is, Γ(Δ) = Δ. Then Γ is Fuchsian if and only if any of the following three equivalent properties hold:
That is, any one of these three can serve as a definition of a Fuchsian group, the others following as theorems. The notion of an invariant proper subset Δ is important; the so-called Picard group PSL(2, Z i) is discrete but does not preserve any disk in the Riemann sphere. Indeed, even the modular group PSL(2, Z), which is a Fuchsian group, does not act discontinuously on the real number line; it has accumulation points at the . Similarly, the idea that Δ is a proper subset of the region of discontinuity is important; when it is not, the subgroup is called a Kleinian group.
It is most usual to take the invariant domain Δ to be either the open unit disk or the upper half-plane.
A Fuchsian group of the first type is a group for which the limit set is the closed real line R ∪ ∞. This happens if the quotient space H/Γ has finite volume, but there are Fuchsian groups of the first kind of infinite covolume.
Otherwise, a Fuchsian group is said to be of the second type. Equivalently, this is a group for which the limit set is a perfect set that is nowhere dense on R ∪ ∞. Since it is nowhere dense, this implies that any limit point is arbitrarily close to an open set that is not in the limit set. In other words, the limit set is a Cantor set.
The type of a Fuchsian group need not be the same as its type when considered as a Kleinian group: in fact, all Fuchsian groups are Kleinian groups of type 2, as their limit sets (as Kleinian groups) are proper subsets of the Riemann sphere, contained in some circle.
where a, b, c, d are integers. The quotient space H/PSL(2, Z) is the moduli space of .
Other Fuchsian groups include the groups Γ( n) for each integer n > 0. Here Γ( n) consists of linear fractional transformations of the above form where the entries of the matrix
are congruent to those of the identity matrix modulo n.
A co-compact example is the (ordinary, rotational) (2,3,7) triangle group, containing the Fuchsian groups of the Klein quartic and of the Macbeath surface, as well as other . More generally, any hyperbolic von Dyck group (the index 2 subgroup of a triangle group, corresponding to orientation-preserving isometries) is a Fuchsian group.
All these are Fuchsian groups of the first kind.
A similar relation holds for the systole of the corresponding Riemann surface, if the Fuchsian group is torsion-free and co-compact.
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