Two groups G1 and G2 are said to be commensurable if there are subgroups H1 ⊂ G1 and H2 ⊂ G2 of finite index such that H1 is isomorphic to H2. For example:
Any two finitely generated free groups on at least 2 generators are commensurable with each other. The group SL is also commensurable with these free groups.
Any two surface groups of genus at least 2 are commensurable with each other.
A different but related notion is used for subgroups of a given group. Namely, two subgroups Γ1 and Γ2 of a groupG are said to be commensurable if the intersection Γ1 ∩ Γ2 is of finite index in both Γ1 and Γ2. Clearly this implies that Γ1 and Γ2 are abstractly commensurable. Example: for nonzero real numbersa and b, the subgroup of Rgenerated by a is commensurable with the subgroup generated by b if and only if the real numbers a and b are commensurable, meaning that a/bbelongs to the rational numbersQ. In geometric group theory, a finitely generated group is viewed as a metric space using the word metric. If two groups are commensurable, then they are quasi-isometric. It has been fruitful to ask when the converse holds. There is an analogous notion in linear algebra: two linear subspaces S and T of a vector spaceV are commensurable if the intersection S ∩ T has finite codimension in both S and T.
The commensurator of a subgroup Γ of a group G, denoted CommG, is the set of elements g of G that such that the conjugate subgroupgΓg−1 is commensurable with Γ. In other words, This is a subgroup of G that contains the normalizer NG. For example, the commensurator of the special linear groupSL in SL contains SL. In particular, the commensurator of SL in SL is dense in SL. More generally, Grigory Margulis showed that the commensurator of a lattice Γ in a semisimple Lie groupG is dense in G if and only if Γ is an arithmetic subgroup of G.
The abstract commensurator
The abstract commensurator of a group, denoted Comm, is the group of equivalence classes of isomorphisms, where and are finite index subgroups of, under composition. Elements of are called commensurators of. If is a connected semisimpleLie group not isomorphic to, with trivial center and no compact factors, then by the Mostow rigidity theorem, the abstract commensurator of any irreducible lattice is linear. Moreover, if is arithmetic, then Comm is virtually isomorphic to a dense subgroup of, otherwise Comm is virtually isomorphic to.