1 Introduction
In papers [Reference Bourgain, Gamburd and Sarnak4, Reference Breuillard, Green and Tao5, Reference Gowers7, Reference Helfgott10, Reference Helfgott11, Reference Murphy17, Reference Noether19, Reference Landazuri and Seitz20, Reference Pyber and Szabó25] and in many others, the authors study the growth properties of rather general subsets A of different groups ${\mathbf G}$ (basically, of Lie type). One of the difficulties concerning growth of A is that, in principle, A can live in a subvariety of ${\mathbf G}$ (see [Reference Helfgott10, Reference Helfgott11, Reference Murphy17]). In this paper, we restrict ourselves to the case when A indeed belongs to a subvariety and consider the most natural combinatorial problem connecting growth of A, namely, the basic question about obtaining upper bounds for the multiplicative energy (see, e.g., [Reference Tao and Vu35]) of A
Our result is the following.
Theorem 1 Let ${\mathbf G}$ be a finite algebraic group over ${\mathbb {F}}_q$ , $V\subseteq {\mathbf G}$ be a variety, and $\Gamma $ be a maximal algebraic subgroup such that a coset of $\Gamma $ is contained in V. Then, for any $A\subseteq V$ , $|A|\ge |\Gamma |^{1+\varepsilon }$ , and all sufficiently large q, one has
where $\delta = \delta (\varepsilon , \dim (V))>0$ and the implied constant in (1.1) depends on $\dim (V), \deg (V)$ , $\dim ({\mathbf G}), \deg ({\mathbf G})$ , and dimension n of ${\mathbb {F}}_q^n \supseteq {\mathbf G}$ .
In particular, bound (1.1) takes place for a variety V iff V does not contain a coset of an algebraic subgroup of size $\Omega (|V|)$ .
Now, we consider a particular case of Theorem 1 when our variety V belongs to a finite Chevalley group and $A\subseteq V$ is a rather large set. It is possible to show that bound (1.1) can be significantly improved for such A in the sense that A must be uniformly distributed among any sets with small product and not just subgroups (see the discussion in Proposition A.1).
Theorem 2 Let ${\mathbf G}_r ({\mathbb {F}}_q)$ be a finite Chevalley group with rank r and odd q, and let $\Pi \le {\mathbf G}_r ({\mathbb {F}}_q)$ be its maximal (by size) parabolic subgroup. Also, let $V \subset {\mathbf G}_r ({\mathbb {F}}_q)$ be a variety which does not coincide with all shifts of conjugates of $\Pi $ . Then, for any $A\subseteq V$ and $|A| \ge |\Pi | q^{-1+c}$ , $c>0$ , one has
where $\delta = \delta (c,r)>0$ , $\| \cdot \|_o$ is the operator norm, and $\rho $ is any nontrivial unitary representation of ${\mathbf G}_r ({\mathbb {F}}_q)$ .
It is interesting that all our conditions in Theorems 1 and 2 concerning intersection of A with subgroups are formulated in terms of V but not A. In a similar way, we do not require that A is a generating set of ${\mathbf G}$ . It differs our result from Larsen–Pink machinery (see [Reference Breuillard, Green and Tao5, Reference Helfgott11, Reference Murphy17, Reference Pyber and Szabó25]).
Theorem 1 has a naturally looking algebraic consequence (see rigorous formulation in Section 4).
Corollary 3 Suppose that ${\mathbf G}$ is a finite algebraic group and $V\subseteq {\mathbf G}$ is a variety. Put
and
Then, $t(V) = O(t_a (V))$ .
In Corollary 3, we assume that q (or $|{\mathbf G}|$ ) tends to infinity and the implied constant in big-O depends on $\dim (V), \deg (V), \dim ({\mathbf G}), \deg ({\mathbf G})$ , and the dimension of the ground affine space.
We obtain several applications of Theorem 1. In the first one, we take our variety V be a Zariski closure of conjugate class C of a finite algebraic group. In [Reference Noether19, Reference Landazuri and Seitz20], the authors obtain that for any such C, one has $|CC| \gg \min \{ |C|^{2-o(1)}, |{\mathbf G}| \}$ . We prove that in certain cases, one has $|AA| \gg |A|^{1+c}$ , $c>0$ , for any sufficiently large subset A of C.
Of course, Theorem 2 is based on a purely noncommutative phenomenon of growth in groups, and, say, estimate (1.2) does not hold in ${\mathbb {F}}^n_q$ . Nevertheless, in Section 5, we obtain a purely commutative application to the so-called restriction problems (see the fundamental book [Reference Stein34] and papers [Reference Bourgain, Fefferman, Fefferman and Wainger2, Reference Bourgain3, Reference Stein33]). Here, we have dealt with the restriction phenomenon in finite fields (see [Reference Lang and Weil21] and good survey [Reference Iosevich, Koh and Lewko14]). Let us recall some definitions. Now, our group ${\mathbf G} = {\mathbb {F}}_q^n$ , and ${\mathbf G}$ acts on ${\mathbf G}$ via shifts. For any function $g:{\mathbf G} \to {\mathbb {C}}$ , consider its Fourier transform
as well as the inverse Fourier transform of a function $f:V \to {\mathbb {C}}$ ,
where $e(-x\cdot \xi )$ is an additive character on ${\mathbf G}$ . Put
The finite-field restriction problem [Reference Lang and Weil21] for our variety V seeks exponent pairs $(q,r)$ such that one has the inequality
t $R^{*}(q \rightarrow r)$ independent of the size of the finite field. In papers [Reference Iosevich and Koh13, Reference Iosevich, Koh and Lewko14, Reference Naimark18, Reference Lang and Weil21, Reference Volobuev36], the authors consider some particular varieties as cones, paraboloids, and spheres. Our result is weaker, but on the other hand, we have dealt with an almost arbitrary variety V. We think that this is the first result of such generality in the restriction theory over finite fields.
Theorem 4 Let $V\subseteq {\mathbb {F}}^n_q$ be a variety and $d=\dim (V)$ . Suppose that V does not contain any line. Then, $R^* (\frac {4}{3-c} \rightarrow 4) \ll 1$ , where $c=c(d)> 0$ .
Let us say a few words about the proofs. To estimate the multiplicative energy ${\mathsf {E}}(A)$ , $A\subseteq V$ , we consider the shifts $A_g:= A \cap Ag \subseteq V\cap Vg$ and use the formula ${\mathsf {E}}(A) = \sum _g |A_g|^2$ . The main idea is that for “typical” g, the intersection $V\cap Vg$ is a variety of a strictly less dimension than $\dim (V)$ , and hence we can use induction, considering $(A_g)_h = A\cap Ag \cap Ah \cap Agh \subseteq (V_g)_h$ , $((A_g)_h)_t \subseteq ((V_g)_h)_t$ , and so on. Our induction procedure can be expressed using the language of the so-called Gowers norms (see [Reference Gowers6], because these norms are defined in terms of the considered intersections $(((A_{g_1})_{g_2})\dots )_{g_k}$ ). Also, we need to connect the multiplicative energy ${\mathsf {E}}(A)$ and Gowers norms of A in a direct way, and we do this using some combinatorial tools (see Section 3 and paper [Reference Shkredov28]). Hence, to obtain bound (1.1), it is sufficient to estimate the Gowers norms of A. In the proof, we separate abelian and nonabelian cases, because the dependence of $\delta $ on $\dim (V)$ and $\varepsilon $ in (1.1) is rather concrete and is much better in the case of an abelian group ${\mathbf G}$ than for a general group ${\mathbf G}$ . Also, we show that “nontypical” elements g exist iff there is a coset of a large algebraic subgroup in V. To avoid such situations, we need the condition $|A|\ge |\Gamma |^{1+\varepsilon }$ in our Theorem 1.
2 Definitions
Let ${\mathbf G}$ be a group with the identity $1$ . Given two sets $A,B\subset {\mathbf G}$ , define the product set of A and B as
In a similar way, we define the higher product sets, e.g., $A^3$ is $AAA$ . Let $A^{-1} := \{a^{-1} ~:~ a\in A \}$ . As usual, having two subsets $A,B$ of a group ${\mathbf G}$ , denote by
the common energy of A and B. Clearly, ${\mathsf {E}}(A,B) = {\mathsf {E}}(B,A)$ , and by the Cauchy–Schwarz inequality,
In a little more general way, define
and, similarly,
For $k=2$ , we have ${\mathsf {E}}^L_k (A) = {\mathsf {E}}^R_k (A)$ , but for larger k, it is not the case. If there is no difference between ${\mathsf {E}}^L_k (A)$ and ${\mathsf {E}}^R_k (A)$ , then we write just ${\mathsf {E}}_k (A)$ . In this paper, we use the same letter to denote a set $A\subseteq {\mathbf G}$ and its characteristic function $A: {\mathbf G} \to \{0,1 \}$ .
First of all, we recall some notions and simple facts from the representation theory (see, e.g., [Reference Liebeck and Shalev23] or [Reference Serre27]). For a finite group ${\mathbf G}$ , let $\widehat {{\mathbf G}}$ be the set of all irreducible unitary representations of ${\mathbf G}$ . It is well known that size of $\widehat {{\mathbf G}}$ coincides with the number of all conjugate classes of ${\mathbf G}$ . For $\rho \in \widehat {{\mathbf G}}$ , denote by $d_\rho $ the dimension of this representation. Thus, ${\mathbf G}$ is a quasi-random group in the sense of Gowers (see [Reference Gowers7]) iff $d_{\rho } \ge |{\mathbf G}|^\varepsilon $ , where $\varepsilon>0$ and $\rho $ is any nontrivial irreducible unitary representation of ${\mathbf G}$ . We write $\langle \cdot , \cdot \rangle $ for the corresponding Hilbert–Schmidt scalar product $\langle A, B \rangle = \langle A, B \rangle _{HS}:= \mathrm {tr} (AB^*)$ , where $A,B$ are any two matrices of the same sizes. Put $| A\| = \sqrt {\langle A, A \rangle }$ . Finally, it is easy to check that for any matrices $A,B$ , one has $\| AB\| \le \| A\|_{o} \| B\|$ and $\| A\|_{o} \le \| A \|$ , where the operator $l^2$ -norm $\| A\|_{o}$ is just the maximal singular value of A.
For any function $f:{\mathbf G} \to \mathbb {C}$ and $\rho \in \widehat {{\mathbf G}}$ , define the matrix $\widehat {f} (\rho )$ , which is called the Fourier transform of f at $\rho $ by the formula
Then, the inverse formula takes place
and the Parseval identity is
The main property of the Fourier transform is the convolution formula
where the convolution of two functions $f,g : {\mathbf G} \to \mathbb {C}$ is defined as
Given a function $f : {\mathbf G} \to \mathbb {C}$ and a positive integer k, we write $f^{(k)} = f^{(k-1)} * f$ for the kth convolution of f. Now, let $k\ge 2$ be an integer and $f_j : {\mathbf G} \to \mathbb {C}$ , $j\in [2k]$ be any functions. Denote by $\mathcal {C}$ the operator of convex conjugation. As in [Reference Shkredov31], define
Put ${\mathsf {T}}_k (f) = {\mathsf {T}}_k (f,\dots , f_{})$ . For example, we have, clearly, ${\mathsf {T}}_2 (A) = {\mathsf {E}} (A)$ . It is easy to see that ${\mathsf {T}}^{1/2k}_k (f)$ defines a norm of a function f (see [Reference Shkredov31]). This fact follows from the following inequality [Reference Shkredov31, Lemma 10]:
In particular, ${\mathsf {E}}(A,A^{-1}) \le {\mathsf {E}}(A)$ .
Now, let us say a few words about varieties. Having a field ${\mathbb {F}}$ , define an (affine) variety in ${\mathbb {F}}^n$ to be the set of the form
where $p_j \in {\mathbb {F}}[x_1,\dots ,x_n]$ . Let us recall some basic properties of varieties. General theory of varieties and schemes can be found, e.g., in [Reference Hartshorne8]. The union of any finite number of varieties is, clearly, a variety, and the intersection of any number of varieties is a variety as well. Having a set X, we denote by $\mathrm {Zcl} (X)$ a minimal (by inclusion) variety, containing X. A variety over an algebraically closed field ${\mathbb {F}}$ is irreducible if it is not the union of two proper subvarieties. Every variety has a unique (up to inclusion) decomposition into finitely many irreducible components [Reference Hartshorne8]. The dimension of V is
where $X_j$ are irreducible subvarieties of V. We will frequently use the simple fact that if $V_1 \subseteq V_2$ are two varieties and $V_2$ is irreducible, then either $V_1=V_2$ , or $\dim (V_1) < \dim (V_2)$ . A variety is absolutely irreducible if it is irreducible over $\overline {{\mathbb {F}}}$ . In this paper, we consider just these varieties.
We define the degree of any irreducible variety V with $\dim (V) = d$ as in [Reference Heintz9], namely,
For an arbitrary variety V, we denote $\deg (V)$ to be the sum of the degrees of its irreducible components. Recall the generalized Bézout theorem (see [Reference Heintz9, Theorem 1]): for any varieties $U,V$ , one has
The signs $\ll $ and $\gg $ are the usual Vinogradov symbols. If we want to underline the dependence on a parameter M, then we write $\ll _M$ and $\gg _M$ . All logarithms are to base $2$ . Sometimes, we allow ourselves to lose logarithmic powers of $|{\mathbb {F}}|$ . In this situation, we write $\lesssim $ and $\gtrsim $ instead of $\ll $ and $\gg $ .
3 On noncommutative Gowers norms
Let ${\mathbf G}$ be a group and $A\subseteq {\mathbf G}$ be a finite set. Let $ \| A \|_{\mathcal {U}^{k}} $ be the Gowers nonnormalized kth-norm [Reference Gowers6] of the characteristic function of A (in multiplicative form; see, say, [Reference Shkredov28]):
where $\vec {\varepsilon } = (\varepsilon _1,\dots ,\varepsilon _k)$ . For example,
is the energy of A, and $\| A \|_{\mathcal {U}^{1}} = |A|^2$ . For any $\vec {s} = (s_1,\dots ,s_k) \in {\mathbf G}^k$ , put
and similar for an arbitrary function $f: {\mathbf G} \to {\mathbb {C}}$ , namely,
where $\mathcal {C}$ is the operator of the conjugation. For example, $A_s (x) = A(x) A(xs)$ or, in other words, $A_s = A\cap (As^{-1})$ . Then, obviously,
Also, note that
Moreover, the induction property for Gowers norms holds (it follows from the definitions or see [Reference Gowers6])
e.g., in particular,
The Gowers norms enjoy the following weak commutativity property. Namely, let $k=n+m$ and $\vec {s} = (s_1,\dots ,s_k) = (\vec {u}, \vec {v})$ , where the vectors $\vec {u}, \vec {v}$ have lengths n and m, correspondingly. We have
In particular, $\| A^{-1} \|_{\mathcal {U}^k} = \| A \|_{\mathcal {U}^k}$ and $\| gA \|_{\mathcal {U}^k} = \| Ag \|_{\mathcal {U}^k} = \| A \|_{\mathcal {U}^k}$ for any $g\in {\mathbf G}$ . To obtain (3.5), just make the changing of variables $u_j x = x \tilde {u}_j$ for $j\in [m]$ .
It was proved in [Reference Gowers6] that ordinary Gowers kth-norms of the characteristic function of any subset of an abelian group ${\mathbf G}$ are connected to each other. In [Reference Shkredov28], the author shows that the connection for the nonnormalized norms does not depend on the size of the group ${\mathbf G}$ . Here, we formulate a particular case of Proposition 35 from [Reference Shkredov28], which relates $\| A \|_{\mathcal {U}^{k}}$ and $\| A \|_{\mathcal {U}^{2}}$ (see Remark 36 here).
Lemma 1 Let A be a finite subset of a commutative group ${\mathbf G}$ . Then, for any integer $k\ge 1$ , one has
In particular,
Actually, one can derive Lemma 1 from Lemma 2, but to prove this more general result, we need an additional notation and arguments.
Given two functions $f,g: {\mathbf G} \to \mathbb {C}$ and an integer $k\ge 0$ , consider the “scalar product”
where $\vec {s} = (s_1,\dots , s_k)$ . For example, $\langle A, B \rangle _1 = {\mathsf {E}}(A,B)$ , $\langle A, B \rangle _0 = |A||B|$ , $\langle A, A \rangle _k = \|A\|_{\mathcal {U}^{k+1}}$ , and $\langle A, 1 \rangle _k = |{\mathbf G}| \|A\|_{\mathcal {U}^{k}}$ (for finite group ${\mathbf G}$ ). Clearly, $\langle f, g \rangle _0 = \left ( \sum _x f(x) \right ) \left ( \overline {\sum _x g(x)} \right )$ , but for $k\ge 1$ , it is easy to see that $\langle f, g \rangle _k \ge 0$ , because $\langle f, g \rangle _k = \sum _{\vec {s}_*, s_k} |(f_{\vec {s}_*} * \overline {\tilde {g}}_{\vec {s}_*}) (s_k)|^2 \ge 0$ , where $\vec {s}_* = (s_1,\dots , s_{k-1})$ , and $\tilde {g}(x) := g(x^{-1})$ . Also, note that
Lemma 2 Let ${\mathbf G}$ be a commutative group and $f,g : {\mathbf G} \to \mathbb {C}$ be functions. Then, for any integer $k\ge 1$ , one has
and hence for an arbitrary $k\ge 2$ and any sets $A,B \subseteq {\mathbf G}$ , the following holds:
where $\beta = \beta (k) \in [4^{-k}, 2^{-k+1}]$ .
For any (not necessary commutative) group ${\mathbf G}$ , if $\|A\|_{\mathcal {U}^k} \le |A|^{k+1-c}$ , where $c>0$ , then ${\mathsf {E}}(A) \le |A|^{3-c_*}$ with $c_* = c_*(c,k)>0$ .
Proof We have
and our first task to estimate the size of the set of $(\vec {s},t)$ in the last formula. Basically, we consider two cases. If the summation in (3.9) is taken over the set
then it gives us $(1-1/2k)$ proportion of $\sigma $ . Cardinality of the set Q can be estimated as
and hence $|Q| \le 2k \| f \|_{\mathcal {U}^{k}} \| g \|_{\mathcal {U}^{k}} \sigma ^{-1}$ . Now, we fix any $j\in [k]$ (without any loss of generality, we can assume that $j=1$ ), put $\vec {s}_* = (s_2,\dots ,s_{k})$ , and consider
Using the changing of the variables as in (3.5) (here we appeal to the commutativity of the group ${\mathbf G}$ ) and arguing as above, we have
Again, if the summation in (3.9) is taken over the set $Q_1$ , then it gives us $(1-1/2k)$ proportion of $\sigma $ . Hence, by the standard projection results (see, e.g., [Reference Bollobás and Thomason1]), we see that the summation in (3.9) is taken over a set $\mathcal {S}$ of vectors $(\vec {s},t)$ of size at most
The proof below is rather technical in the commutative case. If the reader is interested in the general case, then it is possible to avoid all calculations before (3.17), where much simpler arguments are presented to estimate the size of the set $\mathcal {S}$ .
Returning to (3.12) and using the Cauchy–Schwarz inequality, we get
and we have (3.7) up to a constant depending on k. Using the tensor trick (see, e.g., [Reference Tao and Vu35]), we obtain the result with the constant one.
To prove inequality (3.8), we see by induction and formula (3.7) that one has, for $l\le k$ ,
where $\alpha _j (l,k)$ , $\beta _j (l,k)$ are some nonnegative functions. In principle, in view of (3.7), these functions can be calculated via some recurrences, but we restrict ourselves giving just crude bounds for them. We are interested in $l=1$ and k is a fixed number, and hence we write
By homogeneity, we get
In particular, $\beta \le 2^{-k+1}$ . Further taking $A=B$ equals a subgroup, we obtain one more equation
Using trivial inequalities $\|A\|_{\mathcal {U}^j} \le |A|^{j+1}$ , $\|B\|_{\mathcal {U}^j} \le |B|^{j+1}$ and formula (3.14), we derive
as required. Actually, if there is a nontrivial upper bound for $\|A\|_{\mathcal {U}^j}$ (and it will be so in the next section), then the last estimate can be improved in view of Lemma 1. Furthermore, our task is to obtain a good lower bound for $\beta $ . Put $\omega _j := 3+1/j> 3$ , $j\in [k-1]$ . Using (3.7), we get
where S is a quantity depending on $\|A\|_{\mathcal {U}^j}$ , $\|B\|_{\mathcal {U}^j}$ , which we do not specify, and let $x_j$ be some positive numbers, which we will choose (indirectly) later. For $2 \le j \le k-2$ , put
Then, we obtain from (3.15)
Now, choosing $x_{k-2} = \omega _{k-1} x_{k-1}$ , we see that $\beta = x_{k-1}/(4x_1-2x_2)$ , and it remains to estimate $x_{k-1}$ in terms of $x_1, x_2$ . But for all j, one has $\omega _j \le 4$ , hence $x_{k-1} \ge 4^{-1} x_{k-2}$ , and similarly, from $x_{j-1} + 2 x_{j+1} = \omega _j x_{j}$ , $2 \le j \le k-2$ , we get $x_{j} \ge 4^{-1} x_{j-1}$ , and hence $x_{k-1} \ge 4^{-(k-1) }x_1$ . Furthermore, summing (3.16) over $2\le j \le k-2$ and putting $T=\sum _{j=1}^{k-1} x_j$ , we obtain
and hence
In particular, it gives $x_j>0$ for all $j\in [k-1]$ , and thus indeed $\beta \ge 4^{-k}$ .
Now, suppose that ${\mathbf G}$ is an arbitrary group and $\|A\|_{\mathcal {U}^k} \le |A|^{k+1-c}$ , but ${\mathsf {E}}(A) \ge |A|^3/K$ , where $K\ge 1$ is a parameter. By the noncommutative Balog–Szemerédi–Gowers theorem (see [Reference Larsen and Pink22, Theorem 32] or [Reference Tao and Vu35, Proposition 2.43 and Corollary 2.46]), there is $a\in A$ and $A_* \subseteq a^{-1}A$ , $|A_*|\gg _K |A|$ such that $|A^3_*| \ll _K |A_*|$ . We can apply the previous argument to the set $A_*$ and obtain an estimate similar to Lemma 1
Indeed, to bound ${\mathsf {E}}(A_*)$ via $\| A_*\|_{\mathcal {U}^{k+2}}$ using the argument as in the proof above, we need to estimate the size of the set $\mathcal {S}_k$ at each step k. But clearly, $|\mathcal {S}_k| \le |A_* A_*^{-1}|^{k+1} \ll _K |A_*|^{k+1}$ , and hence, by induction, we obtain ${\mathsf {E}}^{2^k}(A_*) \ll _K |A_*|^{3\cdot 2^k-k-3} \| A_* \|_{\mathcal {U}^{k+2}}$ , as required. Finally, from (3.18), it follows that $K^{C(k)}\gg |A|^{c}$ , where $C(k)$ is a constant depending on k only. This completes the proof.▪
A closer look to the proof (see, e.g., definition (3.11)) shows that for $k=1$ , estimate (3.7) of Lemma 1 takes place for any class functions f, g. Nevertheless, for larger k, this argument does not work.
4 The proof of the main result
Let ${\mathbf G}$ be an algebraic group in an affine or projective space of dimension n over the field ${\mathbb {F}}_q$ , and let $V\subseteq {\mathbf G}$ be a variety, $d=\dim (V)$ , and $D=\deg (V)$ . If V is absolutely irreducible, then by Lang and Weil [Reference Mockenhaupt and Tao16], we know that
where $A(n,d,D)$ is a certain constant. By sufficiently large q, we mean that $q\ge q_0 (n,d,D,$ $\dim ({\mathbf G}),\deg ({\mathbf G}))$ and all constants below are assumed to depend on $n,d,D,\dim ({\mathbf G}),\deg ({\mathbf G})$ . In particular, for an absolutely irreducible variety V, one has $q^d \ll |V| \ll q^d$ . One can think about ${\mathbf G}$ and V as varieties defined over $\mathbb {Q}$ by absolutely irreducible polynomials. Then, by the Noether theorem [Reference Liebeck, Schul and Shalev24], we know that ${\mathbf G}$ and V reduce $\mathrm {mod~} p$ to some absolutely irreducible varieties defined over p, $p\notin S({\mathbf G},V)$ , where $S({\mathbf G},V)$ is a certain finite set of the primes.
Finally, for any set $W \subseteq {\mathbf G}$ , consider the quantity
Now, we are ready to estimate different energies of varieties in terms of the quantity $t(V)$ . We are also able to give a nontrivial bound for any sufficiently large subset of V (see inequality (4.5)). The proof relies on Lemma 2, and this lemma works better in the abelian case allowing to find concrete $\delta = \delta (d,\varepsilon )$ in (1.1) for an abelian group ${\mathbf G}$ .
Theorem 1 Let ${\mathbf G}$ be an algebraic group, $V\subseteq {\mathbf G}$ be a variety, $d=\dim (V)$ , $D=\deg (V)$ , and $t=t(V)$ . Then, for any positive integer k and all sufficiently large q, one has
In particular, if V is absolutely irreducible and V is not a coset of a subgroup, then ${\mathsf {E}}_k (V) \ll _{d,D} |V|^{k+1 - \frac {1}{d}}$ .
Similarly, one has
and for any $A\subseteq V$ , the following holds:
Proof First of all, consider the case of an absolutely irreducible V. For any $g\in {\mathbf G}$ , we have either $\dim (V \cap gV) < \dim (V)$ , or g belongs to the stabilizer ${\textrm {Stab}}(V)$ of V. It is well known that any stabilizer under any action of an algebraic group is an algebraic subgroup (but not necessary irreducible). Clearly, ${\textrm {Stab}}(V) \subseteq v^{-1}V$ for any $v\in V$ , and hence either V is a coset of an (algebraic) subgroup, and hence there is nothing to prove, or $\dim ({\textrm {Stab}}(V)) < \dim (V)$ . The degree of the variety $gV \cap V$ is at most $\deg ^2 (V)$ by inequality (2.8). Similarly, because our topological space is a Noetherian one (see, e.g., [Reference Hartshorne8, p. 5]) and ${\textrm {Stab}}(V) = \bigcap _{v\in V} v^{-1}V$ , it follows that the cardinality of ${\textrm {Stab}}(V)$ can be estimated in terms of d and D thanks to (4.1). Hence, all parameters of all appeared varieties are controlled by $d,D$ , n (and, possibly, by $\dim ({\mathbf G}), \deg ({\mathbf G}))$ . Using the Lang–Weil formula (4.1), we obtain for sufficiently large q that $q^d/2 \le |V| \le 2q^d$ , say, further $|{\textrm {Stab}}(V)| \ll q^{d-1}$ , and, similarly, for any $g\notin {\textrm {Stab}}(V)$ , one has $|V \cap gV| \ll q^{d-1}$ . Hence,
Now, to obtain (4.3), we apply the same argument but before we need to consider V as a union of its irreducible components $V=\bigcup _{j=1}^s V_j$ . Clearly, $s\le \deg (V)$ . Take any $g\in {\mathbf G}$ , and consider $V\cap gV = \bigcup _{i,j=1}^s (V_i \cap g V_j)$ . If, for all $i,j\in [s]$ , one has $\dim (V_i \cap g V_j) < \dim V$ , then for such g, we can repeat the previous calculations in (4.6)–(4.7). Consider the set of the remaining g, and denote this set by B. For any $g\in B$ , there is $i,j\in [s]$ such that $\dim (V_i \cap g V_j) = \dim (V)$ . In particular, $\dim (V_i) = \dim (V_j) = \dim (V)$ and $V_i \cap g V_j = V_i = gV_j$ by irreducibility of $V_i,V_j$ . Suppose that for the same pair $(i,j)$ , there is another $g_* = g_* (i,j) \in B$ such that $g_* V_j = V_i$ . Then, $g^{-1}_* g \in {\textrm {Stab}}(V_j)$ . It follows that $g\in g_* {\textrm {Stab}}(V_j)$ , and hence the set B belongs to $\bigcup _{i,j=1}^s g_* (i,j) {\textrm {Stab}}(V_j)$ plus at most $s^2 \le \deg ^2 (V)$ points. Hence, we need to add to the computations in (4.6)–(4.7) the term
as required.
To prove bound (4.4), let us obtain a generalization of (4.3). Put ${\mathsf {E}}^{(l)}_k = {\mathsf {E}}^{(l)}_k (V) := \sum _{\vec {s}} |V_{\vec {s}}|^k$ , where $\vec {s} = (s_1,\dots ,s_l)$ and $V_{\vec {s}}$ as in (3.1). Write $\vec {s} = (\vec {s}_*,s_l)$ . Because ${\mathsf {E}}^{(l)}_k = \sum _{\vec {s}_*} {\mathsf {E}}_k (V_{\vec {s}_*})$ , it follows that by the obtained estimate (4.3),
Here, we have used the fact that the function t on a subset of V does not exceed $t(V)$ . Furthermore, inequality (4.8) gives by induction
Now, applying inequality (4.3) with the parameter $k=2$ and using the notation $\vec {s} = (\vec {s}_*,s_l)$ again, we get
Hence, in view of (4.9), we derive
Finally, take any $A\subseteq V$ . As above, put $\vec {s} = (s_1,\dots ,s_{d}) = (\vec {s}_*, s_d)$ . We have $A_{\vec {s}} \subseteq V_{\vec {s}}$ . Furthermore, by (3.6),
Take any vector $\vec {z} = (z_1,\dots , z_{l})$ , $l< d$ , and consider the decomposition of the variable $V_{\vec {z}}$ onto irreducible components $V_{\vec {z}} (j)$ . As before, define the set $B(\vec {z})$ of all $g\in {\mathbf G}$ such that there are $V_{\vec {z}} (i), V_{\vec {z}} (j)$ with $V_{\vec {z}} (i) = gV_{\vec {z}} (j)$ . Then, arguing as above, we have $|B(\vec {z})| \ll t$ . Using formula (4.10), we get
where for all $\vec {s}$ in $\sigma $ , we have $\dim (V_{\vec {s}}) = 0$ . Hence,
This completes the proof.▪
Once again, the bounds above depend on $d,D$ , as well as on $\dim ({\mathbf G})$ , $\deg ({\mathbf G})$ and on the dimension of the ground affine space.
Remark 2 The quantity $\| V\|_{\mathcal {U}^{k}}$ can be written in different ways as $\sum _{s_1,\dots ,s_k} |V_{s_1,\dots ,s_k}|^2$ , $\sum _{s_1,\dots ,s_{k-1}} {\mathsf {E}} (V_{s_1,\dots ,s_{k-1}})$ , and so on. Taking variables $s_j$ running over the maximal coset belonging to V, we see that all terms with t in (4.4) are needed.
Corollary 3 Let ${\mathbf G}$ be an abelian algebraic group, $V\subseteq {\mathbf G}$ be a variety, $d=\dim (V)$ , and $D=\deg (V)$ . Then, for all sufficiently large q and any $A\subseteq V$ , one has
In particular, for any $A\subseteq V$ with $|A| \ge t^{1+c}$ , $c>0$ , there is $\delta =\delta (d,c)>0$ such that
Bound (4.14) takes place in any algebraic group. Moreover, let $B\subseteq {\mathbf G}$ be an arbitrary set. Then,
where $\beta = \beta (d) \in [4^{-d}, 2^{-d+1}]$ , and for any $k\ge 1$ , one has either ${\mathsf {T}}_k (A) \le |A|^{2k-1-c\beta /4}$ or
Proof Let $d\ge 2$ . By Theorem 1, we have $\| A\|_{\mathcal {U}^{d+1}} \ll t |A|^{d+1}$ . Using the second part of Lemma 1 with $k=d+1$ , we obtain
If $d=1$ , then the arguments of the proof of Theorem 1 (see, e.g., (4.12)) give us
For an arbitrary algebraic group, use the last part of Lemma 2.
To derive (4.15), we can suppose that $|B| \ge |A|$ , because otherwise the required bound
takes place for $\beta = (2^{d+1}-d-5)^{-1}$ , $d\ge 2$ (and similar for $d=1$ ; see estimate (4.13)). Furthermore, let $|B|\ge |A|$ . Then, we use Lemma 2 with $k=d$ , combining with Theorem 1 (see formulae (3.6), (4.11), and (4.12)) and the assumption $|A| \le |B|$ to obtain
and (4.15) follows. Finally, to get (4.16), we use the dyadic pigeonhole principle and the fact that ${\mathsf {T}}^{1/2k} (f)$ defines a norm of f to find the number $\Delta>0$ and the set P such that $P = \{ x\in {\mathbf G} ~:~ \Delta < A^{(k)} (x) \le 2\Delta \}$ and ${\mathsf {T}}_{k+1} (A) \lesssim \Delta ^2 {\mathsf {E}}(A,P)$ . Thus (we assume that $c\le 1$ ),
Suppose that ${\mathsf {T}}_k (A) \ge |A|^{2k-1-\varepsilon }$ , where $\varepsilon \le c\beta /4$ . In view of the last inequality and $\beta \le 2^{-d+1}$ , one has
This completes the proof.▪
Remark 4 As it was said in the proof of Lemma 2, the bound for ${\mathsf {E}}(A,B)$ , $A\subseteq V$ , where V is our variety and $B\subseteq {\mathbf G}$ is an arbitrary set, can be improved, because we have a nontrivial upper bound for $\| A\|_{\mathcal {U}^l}$ , $2\le l\le d+1$ . Thus, bounds (4.15) and (4.16) can be improved slightly. Also, inequalities (4.15) and (4.16) say, basically, that either $|A^3|$ is much larger than $|A|$ or $|A^3|$ is larger than $|A^2|$ .
Theorem 1 and Corollary 3 imply the following criterion.
Corollary 5 Let ${\mathbf G}$ be a finite simple group, $V\subseteq {\mathbf G}$ be a variety, $d=\dim (V)$ , and $D=\deg (V)$ . Suppose that $t(V) = o(|V|)$ . Then, there is $\delta =\delta (d,n)>0$ such that for any $A\subseteq V$ , $|A| \gg |V|$ , the following holds:
Clearly, if $t(V) \gg |V|$ , then (4.17) does not hold, and hence Corollary 5 is indeed a criterion. Also, it gives a lower bound for $\delta $ of the form $\delta \gg 1/d$ . Recall that our current dependence on d in (4.17) has an exponential nature.
5 Applications
In [Reference Noether19, Reference Landazuri and Seitz20], the authors obtain the following results on growth of normal sets.
Theorem 1 Let ${\mathbf G}$ be a finite simple group and $N\subseteq {\mathbf G}$ be a normal set. Then, there is $n\ll \log |\Gamma |/\log |N|$ such that $N^n = {\mathbf G}$ . Moreover, for any $\varepsilon>0$ , there is $\delta =\delta (\varepsilon )>0$ such that any normal set N with $|N| \le |{\mathbf G}|^\delta $ satisfies $|NN| \ge |N|^{2-\varepsilon }$ .
From Corollary 3, we obtain a result on the growth of an arbitrary subset of a conjugate class.
Corollary 2 Let ${\mathbf G}$ be a finite connected semisimple algebraic group, and let $C \subseteq {\mathbf G}$ be a conjugate class. Also, let $A\subseteq C$ be an arbitrary set with $|A| \ge t(\mathrm {Zcl}(C))^{1+\varepsilon }$ . Then, for a certain $\delta>0$ depending on dimension of C, one has ${\mathsf {E}}(A) \ll _{\deg (\mathrm {Zcl}(C))} |A|^{3-\delta }$ . In particular, $|AA| \gg _{\deg (\mathrm {Zcl}(C))} |A|^{1+\delta }$ .
Proof It is well known (see, e.g., [Reference Humphreys12, pp. 15 and 17]) that for any conjugate class C, its Zariski closure $\mathrm {Zcl}(C)$ equals C and possibly other conjugate classes of strictly lower dimension, as well as that $C=C(x)$ is a variety iff $x \in {\mathbf G}$ is a semisimple element. Now, the result follows from a direct application of Corollary 3 where the implied constants depend on $\deg (\mathrm {Zcl}(C))$ , $\dim (C)$ , $\dim ({\mathbf G}), \deg ({\mathbf G})$ , and the dimension of the ground affine space. This completes the proof.▪
One can see that $t(C) \le |C|^{1-c_*}$ for a certain $c_*>0$ via the general bound on such intersections with generating sets (see [Reference Murphy17]) or, alternatively, from some modifications of Theorem 1 (see [Reference Noether19, Reference Landazuri and Seitz20]). Thus, Corollary 2 takes place for all large subsets of conjugate classes.
Question. Is it true that for any $A\subseteq C$ , where C is a conjugate class such that $|A|\ge |C|^{1-o(1)}$ , say, one has $A^n = {\mathbf G}$ , where n is a function on $\log |{\mathbf G}|/\log |A|$ ? For $n\ll \log |{\mathbf G}|/\log |A|$ ? For $C=C(x)$ , where x is a semisimple element?
Now, we are ready to obtain a nontrivial upper bound for any sufficiently large subset of a Chevalley group living in a variety differ from the maximal parabolic subgroup.
Theorem 3 Let ${\mathbf G}_r ({\mathbb {F}}_q)$ be a finite Chevalley group with rank r and odd q and $\Pi \le {\mathbf G}_r ({\mathbb {F}}_q)$ be its a maximal (by size) parabolic subgroup. Also, let $V \subset {\mathbf G}_r ({\mathbb {F}}_q)$ be a variety differ from all shifts of conjugates of $\Pi $ . Then, for any $A\subseteq V$ and $|A| \ge |\Pi | q^{-1+c}$ , $c>0$ , one has
where $\delta = \delta (c,r)>0$ and $\rho $ is any nontrivial representation of ${\mathbf G}_r ({\mathbb {F}}_q)$ .
Proof Because by the assumption $|A| \ge |\Pi | q^{-1+c}$ , it follows that $|V| \ge |\Pi | q^{-1+c}$ and hence V is rather large. Also, one can see that, trivially, $|A|\ge |\Pi | q^{-1+c} \gg q^{1+c}$ . Furthermore, by [Reference Shkredov30, Lemma 8], we know that $\Pi $ is the maximal (by size) subgroup of ${\mathbf G}({\mathbb {F}}_q)$ , and for all other subgroups $\Gamma \le {\mathbf G}({\mathbb {F}}_q)$ , one has $|\Gamma | \le q^{-1} |\Pi |$ ( $\Gamma $ is not conjugate to $\Pi $ , of course). In particular, in view of (4.1),
where $c_* = \min \{c,1\}$ . Take any subgroup H differ from all conjugates of $\Pi $ . Also, let $x\in {\mathbf G}_r ({\mathbb {F}}_q)$ be an arbitrary element. Our task is to estimate the above size of the intersection $A_* := A\cap xH \subseteq V$ . By Corollary 5 and estimate (2.1), we have
and hence, in particular, $|A_*| \ll |A|^{(1+\delta )^{-1}}$ (actually, in this place of the proof, we can assume a weaker condition on size of A). By a similar argument and estimate (4.1), we derive that
and hence for any proper subgroup $\Gamma \subset {\mathbf G}_r ({\mathbb {F}}_q)$ and for all $x\in {\mathbf G}_r ({\mathbb {F}}_q)$ , one has $|A\cap x\Gamma | \ll |A|^{} q^{-c/2}$ (we use $|A| \gg q$ and assume that $\delta \le c$ ). In particular, A is a generating set of ${\mathbf G}_r ({\mathbb {F}}_q)$ . Combining this observation with the fact (see [Reference Lewko15]) that Chevalley groups are quasi-random in the sense of Gowers [Reference Gowers7], we obtain desired estimate (5.1) (see, e.g., [Reference Helfgott10, Reference Helfgott11], [Reference Shkredov29, Sections 8 and 10]). This completes the proof.▪
Now, we obtain an application of Corollary 3 to some questions about the restriction phenomenon. Recall that in this setting, our group ${\mathbf G}$ is ${\mathbf G} = {\mathbb {F}}^n$ , ${\mathbb {F}}$ is a finite field, $V\subseteq {\mathbb {F}}^n$ is a variety, and ${\mathbf G}$ acts on ${\mathbf G}$ via shifts. For any function $g:{\mathbb {F}}^n \to {\mathbb {C}}$ , consider the commutative analogue of (2.2)
as well as the inverse Fourier transform of a function $f:V \to {\mathbb {C}}$ ,
where $e(x\cdot \xi ) = e^{2\pi i (x_1\xi _1 + \dots +x_n \xi _n)/\mathrm {char} ({\mathbb {F}})}$ for $x = (x_1,\dots ,x_n)$ , $\xi = (\xi _1,\dots ,\xi _n)$ . Thus, a “Lebesgue $L^q$ -norm” of f on V is defined as
while for a function g, it is
The finite-field restriction problem [Reference Lang and Weil21] for our variety V seeks exponent pairs $(q,r)$ such that one has the inequality
or, equivalently,
takes place with a constant $R^{*}(q \rightarrow r)$ independent of the size of the finite field. As before, we use the notation $\lesssim $ and $\gtrsim $ instead of $\ll $ and $\gg $ , allowing ourselves to lose logarithmic powers of $|{\mathbb {F}}|$ .
Using the arguments of the proofs of [Reference Lang and Weil21, Lemma 5.1 and Proposition 5.2], we obtain the following result.
Theorem 4 Let $V\subseteq {\mathbb {F}}^n$ be a variety and $d=\dim (V)$ . Suppose that V does not contain any line. Then, $R^* (\frac {4}{3-c} \rightarrow 4) \ll 1$ , where $c=c(d)> 0$ .
Proof According to our assumption that V does not contain any line, we see that the parameter $t(V)$ equals $1$ . Hence, by Corollary 3, we know that ${\mathsf {E}}(A) \ll |A|^{3-c} = |A|^\kappa $ , where $c=c(d)>0$ . Put $q=4/\kappa $ , and we want to obtain a good bound for $R^* (q \rightarrow 4)$ . We want to obtain an estimate of the form (see the proofs of [Reference Lang and Weil21, Lemma 5.1 and Proposition 5.2])
where f is an arbitrary function (we can freely assume that f is positive). Using the dyadic pigeonhole principle, we need to prove the last bound for any $f=A$ with $A\subseteq V$ , and this is equivalent to
This completes the proof.▪
Notice that if the variety V contains subspaces of positive dimension, then there is no any restriction-type result as in Theorem 4 in such generality (see, e.g., [Reference Lang and Weil21, Section 4]).
A Appendix
Now, we obtain an analogue of the Weyl criterion for noncommutative case. In this situation, ordinary abelian intervals or progressions correspond to some structural nonabelian objects as subgroups. In particular, the first part of the Proposition A.1 below is applicable for subgroups H of our group ${\mathbf G}$ . Of course, such results should be known, but it is difficult to find them in the literature, and we include Proposition A.1 and its converse for the completeness.
Proposition A.1 Let $\varepsilon \in (0,1]$ be a real number, ${\mathbf G}$ be a finite group, and $A\subseteq {\mathbf G}$ be a set such that for any nontrivial irreducible representation $\rho $ , one has
Then, for any $H, H_*\subseteq {\mathbf G}$ , $1\in H_*$ with $|HH_*| \le |H| + K|H_*|$ , one has
Proof Put $\Pi = HH_*$ . Then, for any $x\in H$ , the following holds $H(x) = |H_*|^{-1} (\Pi * H_*^{-1} ) (x)$ . Hence,
and thus in view of formulae (2.4) and (2.5), we obtain
where $|\mathcal {E}| \le K|H_*|$ . Applying condition (A.1), the Cauchy–Schwarz inequality, and formula (2.4) again, we get
This completes the proof.▪
The inverse statement to Proposition A.1 also takes place, but it requires some notation, and, actually, our argument gives an effective bound if the dimension of the corresponding representation $\rho $ is small. Following [Reference Sanders26, Section 17], define the Bohr sets in a (nonabelian) group ${\mathbf G}$ .
Definition A.2 Let $\Gamma $ be a collection of some unitary representations of ${\mathbf G}$ and $\delta \in (0,2]$ be a real number. Put
The number $|\Gamma |$ is called the dimension of ${\textrm {Bohr}} (\Gamma ,\delta )$ . If $\Gamma = \{ \rho \}$ , then we write just ${\textrm {Bohr}} (\rho ,\delta )$ for ${\textrm {Bohr}} (\{ \rho \},\delta )$ . A Bohr set ${\textrm {Bohr}} (\rho , \delta )$ is called to be regular if
whenever $|\kappa | \le 1/(100 d^2_\rho )$ .
Even in the abelian case, it is easy to see that not each Bohr set is regular (see, e.g., [Reference Tao and Vu35, Section 4.4]). Nevertheless, it can be showed (see, e.g., [Reference Shkredov32]) that one can find a regular Bohr set decreasing the parameter $\delta $ slightly.
Lemma A.3 Let $\delta \in [0,1/2]$ be a real number and $\rho $ be a unitary representation. Then, there is $\delta _1 \in [\delta ,2\delta ]$ such that ${\textrm {Bohr}} (\rho , \delta _1)$ is regular.
Let us remark an universal lower bound for the size of any Bohr set (see [Reference Sanders26, Lemma 17.3], [Reference Shkredov32, Proposition 28] for the case of multidimensional Bohr sets).
Lemma A.4 Let $\delta \in (0,2]$ be a real number and ${\textrm {Bohr}} (\rho , \delta ) \subseteq {\mathbf G}$ be a one-dimensional Bohr set. Then,
where $c>0$ is an absolute constant.
Now, suppose that for a set $A\subseteq {\mathbf G}$ , one has $|A| = \delta |{\mathbf G}|$ and $\| \widehat {A} (\rho ) \|_o \ge \varepsilon |A|$ . Put $f (x) = f_A (x) = A(x) - \delta $ . Take a regular Bohr set $B= {\textrm {Bohr}} (\rho , \delta )$ , $\delta = \varepsilon /4$ , and let $B_* = {\textrm {Bohr}} (\rho , \kappa \delta )$ , where $|\kappa | \le 1/(100 d^2_\rho )$ is a certain number. Then, by the definition of Bohr sets, we have
where $|\mathcal {E}| \le 2\delta |A|$ . Thus,
and hence in view of Lemma A.4, we find $h\in {\mathbf G}$ with
On the other hand, by the regularity of B, one has $|BB_*| \le |B| (1+ 100 d^2_\rho |\kappa |)$ . It implies that Proposition A.1 can be reversed indeed.
Acknowledgment
I thank Nikolai Vavilov for useful discussions. I deeply thank Brendan Murphy for his idea to study energies of subsets of various varieties. Also, I thank the anonymous reviewers for their careful reading of our manuscript and their many insightful comments and suggestions.