
TL;DR
This paper investigates the growth of irreducible complex representations of linear groups through their representation zeta functions, revealing a dichotomy based on the group's anisotropic or isotropic nature and establishing bounds on the abscissa of convergence.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the representation zeta function for arithmetic groups, including explicit determination of the abscissa of convergence and a surprising dichotomy based on group properties.
Findings
The abscissa of convergence at infinity is precisely determined for certain algebraic groups.
A dichotomy exists: compact (anisotropic) groups have abscissa tending to zero as dimension increases.
Finitely generated linear groups have a positive lower bound for the abscissa of convergence.
Abstract
Let be a group and the number of its -dimensional irreducible complex representations. We define and study the associated representation zeta function . When is an arithmetic group satisfying the congruence subgroup property then has an ``Euler factorization". The "factor at infinity" is sometimes called the "Witten zeta function" counting the rational representations of an algebraic group. For these we determine precisely the abscissa of convergence. The local factor at a finite place counts the finite representations of suitable open subgroups of the associated simple group over the associated local field . Here we show a surprising dichotomy: if is compact (i.e. anisotropic over ) the abscissa of convergence goes to 0 when goes to infinity,…
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