In group theory, a balanced group is a topological group whose left and right uniform structres coincide.

Definition

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A topological group   is said to be balanced if it satisfies the following equivalent conditions.

  • The identity element   has a local base consisting of neighborhoods invariant under conjugation (i.e., ones for which   for all  ).
  • The right uniform structure and the left uniform structure of   are the same.[1]: 70, Theorem 1.8.8 
  • The gruop multiplication   is uniformly continuous, with respect to the right uniform structure of  .[1]: 79, Exercise 1.8.c 
  • The gruop multiplication   is uniformly continuous, with respect to the left uniform structure of  .[1]: 79, Exercise 1.8.c 

Properties

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The completion of a balanced group   with respect to its uniform structure admits a unique topological group structure extending that of  . This generalizes the case of abelian groups and is a special case of the two-sided completion of an arbitrary topological group, which is with respect to the coarsest uniform structure finer than both the left and the right uniform structures.

For a unimodular group (i.e., a Hausdorff locally compact group whose left and right Haar measures coincide)  , the following two conditions are equivalent.

Examples

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Trivially every Abelian topological group is balanced. Every compact topological group (not necessarily Hausdorff) is balanced, which follows from the Heine–Cantor theorem for uniform spaces. Neither of these two sufficient conditions is not necessary, for there are non-Abelian compact groups (such as the orthogonal group  ) and there are non-compact abelian groups (such as  ).

References

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  1. ^ a b c Arhangel’skii, Alexander; Tkachenko, Mikhail (2008). Topological groups and related structures. Atlantis Studies in Mathematics. Vol. 1. Paris: Atlantis Press. ISBN 978-90-78677-06-2. MR 2433295. Zbl 1323.22001.
  2. ^ Godement, Roger (1951). "Mémoire sur la théorie des caractères dans les groupes localement compacts unimodulaires". Journal de Mathématiques Pures et Appliquées. Neuvième Série. 30: 1–110. ISSN 0021-7824. MR 0041857.