Locally moving groups and laminar actions on the line
Joaqu\'in Brum, Nicol\'as Matte Bon, Crist\'obal Rivas, Michele, Triestino

TL;DR
This paper investigates the structure and classification of actions of locally moving groups on the real line, showing conditions under which actions are semi-conjugate to standard actions and exploring laminar actions and local rigidity.
Contribution
It provides new structure theorems for actions of locally moving groups on the line, including laminar actions and conditions for semi-conjugacy and local rigidity.
Findings
Every $C^1$ action of a locally moving group is semi-conjugate to its standard or a non-faithful action.
For a large class of groups, there are uncountably many conjugacy classes of faithful minimal actions.
Standard actions of these groups are locally rigid under small perturbations.
Abstract
We prove various results that, given a sufficiently rich subgroup of the group of homeomorphisms on the real line, describe the structure of the other possible actions of on the line, and address under which conditions such actions must be semi-conjugate to the natural defining action of . The main assumption is that should be locally moving, meaning that for every open interval the subgroup of elements fixing pointwise its complement, acts on it without fixed points. We show that when is a locally moving group, every action of on the real line is semi-conjugate to its standard action or to a non-faithful action. The situation is much wilder when considering actions by homeomorphisms: for a large class of groups, we describe uncountably many conjugacy classes of faithful minimal actions. Next, we prove structure theorems for actions, based on the study…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsGeometric and Algebraic Topology · Advanced Algebra and Geometry · Homotopy and Cohomology in Algebraic Topology
